Electic Guitar question
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- Thomas Bohlen
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- Joined: 12 Jun 2009 9:35 pm
- Location: New York, NY
Electic Guitar question
Hi everyone, got a guitar setup question for ya.
sorry i didn't want to join another board and figure there are some VERY knowledgable people around here, so here goes.
I have a gibson les paul and recently its been having some tuning problems. Cold weather and soft case gigging aint so great I'm sure.
Basically its just the G string, in tune open at the nut and when I play chords up the neck its easily gets out of whack. Definitely an intonation issue. but when i hit the harmonic on the 12th fret its comes out straight G.
Any ideas on how to fix this problem?
man thanks.
sorry i didn't want to join another board and figure there are some VERY knowledgable people around here, so here goes.
I have a gibson les paul and recently its been having some tuning problems. Cold weather and soft case gigging aint so great I'm sure.
Basically its just the G string, in tune open at the nut and when I play chords up the neck its easily gets out of whack. Definitely an intonation issue. but when i hit the harmonic on the 12th fret its comes out straight G.
Any ideas on how to fix this problem?
man thanks.
- Dave Harmonson
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- Gary Cosden
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I would also recommend a new set of strings before you adjust intonation at the bridge. No sense in having it only play in tune with old strings. As strings age the intonation will go off and you will be able to see it by playing the harmonic at the 12th fret and comparing that to the fretted note at the 12th fret.
- Jerry Hayes
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Also, how high is your action? Guitars with high action tend to be out of tune more than ones with it lowered. When you fret a string you have to push exactly straight down. If your action's higher that's harder to do........JH in Va.
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- Thomas Bohlen
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- Thomas Bohlen
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Unless the action is extremely high it shouldn't be necessary to adjust it at the bridge, as long as you're happy with it.Thomas Bohlen wrote:can i fix this without lowering the action too much?
A higher action tends to make the intonation go sharp, what needs to be done then is to adjust the individual saddle(s) at the bridge,- pull the saddle(s) further back, effectively making the distance from the 12th fret to the saddle longer.
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if the intonation is correct at the bridge and the nut slots are cut correctly then you need to always temper the tuning on a standard 6 string guitar by tuning the g string a little flat. the fretted guitar is a tempered instrument. if you tune all the pitches straight up on your tuner, and play an E chord and then a C chord both first position, you will notice that that they are not in tune. the g string is all you need to compensate for.
just tune the g string a little flat until you can live with the balance between the two chords.
i have repaired and adjusted THOUSANDS of guitars in the last 35+ years. this issue is just so common to all of them.
just tune the g string a little flat until you can live with the balance between the two chords.
i have repaired and adjusted THOUSANDS of guitars in the last 35+ years. this issue is just so common to all of them.