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Is there any advantage to a tapered wooden endpin as opposed to just screwing a metal strap button into a solid endblock? My "good" guitar came with no endpin hole so I just put identical screw-on shiny metal buttons on the neck-heel and at the end. Very secure, easily reversed by simply unscrewing and took almost no time to install.

I recently acquired a cheap Chinese dreadnought that uses the traditional Martin-like tapered hole with a wooden endpin. Problem is the endpin is barely big enough and will pop out at a moment's notice. Why on earth do these things still get installed on guitars? What am I missing?

Second question, rather than buying and fitting a larger pin or doing Frank's trick with the superglue in the hole (requiring a reamer I don't own) is there any straightforward way to put a screw-on button down there instead? It's a guitar with little or no resale value (bad neck angle) so I'm not concerned about whether it would annoy someone down the road. Even if I get one that fits snugly it's still not as easy or secure to attach a strap to as a metal button...

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Having a hole in the end is an excellent opportunity to add a pick up and make a cheap guitar sound a little better with some tasty signal processing.
I would just put a plug in it and put a screw on one in there with a piece of lether or some other matieral to cover any of the plug that may be showing. Bill""""""
An easy way to get the tapered endpin to stay in place is to simply wrap some paper round it!
I know of a shop full of vintage Martins where the tapered end-pins are kept in the cases. The owner does not keep an end-pin in any of the guitars because if the guitar is dropped even 6 inches onto a hard surface the pin becomes a wedge driven into the end block and likely to split it. So, I am with you, Brent; I must be missing something when it comes to the tapered end-pin.

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