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I'm posting pics from my recent triumph , repairing a broken truss rod on a mid 60's Gibson Hummingbird.....The neck was pretty straight without tension , so I new I could do this.....I've saved vintage Fender necks going through the 3rd fret dot , and a custom color 60's Fender bass with matching headstock by going through the block marker....If the neck was warped , I would have planed and re-fretted them , but they were all close.....I did the first one over a decade ago , and it's still out there , doing fine...

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Have to say I'm with Jeff on this one. If I were doing a similar repair I would have been inclined to thread the anchor end of the rod and install a nut and washer, then maybe infill around that connection with epoxy. Different strokes I guess.

I thought of that , but how would you be able to screw the rod into the anchor ?....Being that the neck was pretty straight without tension , I went with this again...The wood of the neck is over 50 years old , and is probably done with moving around...

You would have to thread the nut to the rod, not rod to nut so you're cavity would need to allow for that. You would need some space for a small washer anyhow. The process would be to slowly bring the rod into the cavity as you threaded on the nut. Filling with epoxy would then lock the nut.

Gotcha

This is startin' to actually L00k a holelot like fishin'......cool info !

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