Yamaha FG-375S needs a new truss rod - any insight? - FRETS.NET2024-03-29T10:15:29Zhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/forum/topics/yamaha-fg-375s-needs-a-new-truss-rod-any-insight?commentId=2177249%3AComment%3A170003&x=1&feed=yes&xn_auth=noJohn,
Guitar is back from lu…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-08-26:2177249:Comment:1723642017-08-26T17:09:37.657ZDavid Burchfieldhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/DavidBurchfield
<p>John,</p>
<p></p>
<p>Guitar is back from luthier and it is going to work out just fine! I am going to have to do a bit of adjustment on the saddle and some more truss rod adjustment as it all settles in, but it is going to be quite a player as soon as I get everything as I like it.</p>
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<p>I certainly hope your project is progressing as you would like it.</p>
<p>John,</p>
<p></p>
<p>Guitar is back from luthier and it is going to work out just fine! I am going to have to do a bit of adjustment on the saddle and some more truss rod adjustment as it all settles in, but it is going to be quite a player as soon as I get everything as I like it.</p>
<p></p>
<p>I certainly hope your project is progressing as you would like it.</p> To update further.....
The c…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-06-09:2177249:Comment:1700032017-06-09T14:52:28.513ZDavid Burchfieldhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/DavidBurchfield
<p>To update further.....</p>
<p></p>
<p>The channel for the rod had epoxy in it, obviously in an attempt to anchor it from turning because the anchor in the heel was either missing or so badly chewed up that it was non functional. Apparently, some hack tech attempted to effect a repair on what he had no clue about, and made the situation even worse. Isn't it amazing what some people will do to wreck a perfectly good instrument? I am looking forward to getting it back here to play it and make a…</p>
<p>To update further.....</p>
<p></p>
<p>The channel for the rod had epoxy in it, obviously in an attempt to anchor it from turning because the anchor in the heel was either missing or so badly chewed up that it was non functional. Apparently, some hack tech attempted to effect a repair on what he had no clue about, and made the situation even worse. Isn't it amazing what some people will do to wreck a perfectly good instrument? I am looking forward to getting it back here to play it and make a determination if it is as high quality an instrument as many have said.</p> Hi John,
I was able to get a…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-06-03:2177249:Comment:1695162017-06-03T16:14:40.920ZDavid Burchfieldhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/DavidBurchfield
<p><a href="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/2167764424?profile=original" target="_self"><img width="721" src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/2167764424?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024" class="align-full" width="721"/></a>Hi John,</p>
<p></p>
<p>I was able to get a photo of the binding for you. I hope this helps. It's all back together and just needs some minor finish touch up.</p>
<p><a href="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/2167764424?profile=original" target="_self"><img width="721" src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/2167764424?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024" class="align-full" width="721"/></a>Hi John,</p>
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<p>I was able to get a photo of the binding for you. I hope this helps. It's all back together and just needs some minor finish touch up.</p> Dave glad everything is worki…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-05-27:2177249:Comment:1694202017-05-27T03:39:27.115ZJohn Yungbluthhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/JohnYungbluth
<p>Dave glad everything is working out for you. Are you going with a 2 way rod?</p>
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<p>I've lined up a few cadaver necks to do a few practice runs before I attempt this one. Haven't finalized my neck jig yet.</p>
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<p>Since I own it, I can progress at my own speed and not rush through it. Thanks for the binding information.</p>
<p>Dave glad everything is working out for you. Are you going with a 2 way rod?</p>
<p></p>
<p>I've lined up a few cadaver necks to do a few practice runs before I attempt this one. Haven't finalized my neck jig yet.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Since I own it, I can progress at my own speed and not rush through it. Thanks for the binding information.</p> John........ an update for yo…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-05-26:2177249:Comment:1693672017-05-26T23:39:21.719ZDavid Burchfieldhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/DavidBurchfield
<p>John........ an update for you</p>
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<p>Ed has the fingerboard off, and found that it had been off previously, and get this, reattached with epoxy! He said it was a real struggle to get it off but all ended up successfully and none of the binding was damaged.</p>
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<p>A new truss rod is on the way, and after the mess from the epoxy is rectified, it will all go back together and hopefully become playable. I spoke with him about your truss rod, and he said he would rather use one…</p>
<p>John........ an update for you</p>
<p></p>
<p>Ed has the fingerboard off, and found that it had been off previously, and get this, reattached with epoxy! He said it was a real struggle to get it off but all ended up successfully and none of the binding was damaged.</p>
<p></p>
<p>A new truss rod is on the way, and after the mess from the epoxy is rectified, it will all go back together and hopefully become playable. I spoke with him about your truss rod, and he said he would rather use one that he used in the custom guitars that he builds. I do thank you for your generous offer of the repaired one you have.</p>
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<p>I don't consider my skills yet at the level to attempt this task, and now learning what I have, I am happy I didn't attempt it. Now, if it were a Trumpet, I would have been in to it and finished to playing condition at this point.</p>
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<p>I do have a couple of photos of the binding that I took for you, but the website won't let me upload them. I can tell you that there are dots on the binding that correspond to those on the fingerboard.</p>
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<p>I will keep you up to date on progress.</p>
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<p>Dave</p> Good to hear from you Dave.…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-04-13:2177249:Comment:1687942017-04-13T03:03:09.326ZJohn Yungbluthhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/JohnYungbluth
<p>Good to hear from you Dave.</p>
<p></p>
<p>I'm in neutral on my guitar. Busy cleaning out and getting ready to sell my dads house.</p>
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<p>I have a modern 2 way rod I'm going to drop in my guitar. This will be my first attempt at this conversion from a single action to a dual action rod, so I've gathered up a few old cadaver necks and need to build a jig to hold everything properly. Practice a few times first.</p>
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<p>I have my original single action rod I had repaired. If…</p>
<p>Good to hear from you Dave.</p>
<p></p>
<p>I'm in neutral on my guitar. Busy cleaning out and getting ready to sell my dads house.</p>
<p></p>
<p>I have a modern 2 way rod I'm going to drop in my guitar. This will be my first attempt at this conversion from a single action to a dual action rod, so I've gathered up a few old cadaver necks and need to build a jig to hold everything properly. Practice a few times first.</p>
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<p>I have my original single action rod I had repaired. If you want it we can work that out. Then you don't have to remove the fingerboard, just pull the neck , the rod slides in from the heel end. Get a re-set done on the neck and you're in business for another 20-30 years. Just what you need, more options to ponder.</p>
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<p>Let me know.</p> John,
I am home from vacatio…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-04-13:2177249:Comment:1687012017-04-13T02:40:56.288ZDavid Burchfieldhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/DavidBurchfield
<p>John,</p>
<p></p>
<p>I am home from vacation and picked the guitar up from the repair shop. Here are a couple of photos of the binding along the side. Do these help?</p>
<p></p>
<p>As an aside, I met a gentleman on vacation who is a builder/luthier who offered to take the fingerboard off and install a new truss rod for a price I can't refuse. We will hope this provides some good results.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Dave</p>
<p>John,</p>
<p></p>
<p>I am home from vacation and picked the guitar up from the repair shop. Here are a couple of photos of the binding along the side. Do these help?</p>
<p></p>
<p>As an aside, I met a gentleman on vacation who is a builder/luthier who offered to take the fingerboard off and install a new truss rod for a price I can't refuse. We will hope this provides some good results.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Dave</p> More practical, experienced m…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-01-08:2177249:Comment:1658302017-01-08T05:48:14.066ZJohn Yungbluthhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/JohnYungbluth
<p>More practical, experienced minds needed, again......</p>
<p></p>
<p>I need some practical experience from someone who has done this conversion from a single rod to a 2 way truss rod. Follow me through this preliminary scenario and let me know if you see any pitfalls on the horizon. I'm breaking this into 3 phases.</p>
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<p>Brian and Russell, thanks for your repair advice earlier in this post. I'm proceeding with that as my foundation.</p>
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<p>Phase1 : Calculate what 2 way…</p>
<p>More practical, experienced minds needed, again......</p>
<p></p>
<p>I need some practical experience from someone who has done this conversion from a single rod to a 2 way truss rod. Follow me through this preliminary scenario and let me know if you see any pitfalls on the horizon. I'm breaking this into 3 phases.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Brian and Russell, thanks for your repair advice earlier in this post. I'm proceeding with that as my foundation.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Phase1 : Calculate what 2 way rod will fit the repaired neck. This I need before I build my routing jig or position my dowel holes.</p>
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<p>Here's where I have no experience at all in correctly determining what length rod will fit and function properly. The old single rod came completely through to the inside of the dovetail on the heel.</p>
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<p>I see 14 1/4 inch rods. I see rods that are threaded at both end, some that are welded at the non-adjusting end. Advantages, disadvantages each?</p>
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<p>First, Do I need to leave a specific distance behind the end of the rod to the heel? 1/4 -1/2 inch? </p>
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<p>Second, Does the threaded rod assembly, behind the nut adjuster, have restrictions on how far forward it can come towards the nut? Does it need to stay back say 1/4-1 inch to get a solid gluing surface between the fingerboard and the neck?</p>
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<p>A truss rod channel of 3/8 inch deep will cut down into the repaired break in the neck/heel. Is that a concern to remove a small foot print of the glued repaired surface?</p>
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<p>Phase 2: Repair the neck/heel break</p>
<p> </p>
<p>I have removed the rod. </p>
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<p>I'm going to dry align the broken neck to the still mounted heel, and then drill from the top of the neck 2 alignment holes for dowels, through the neck into the heel.</p>
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<p>Steam out the remaing portion of the heel.</p>
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<p>Clean up, align and glue up the neck and heel with the dowels.</p>
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<p>Phase 3: With all the dimensions determined by Phase 1, build the neck jig for routing out the old hardwood cap and making the new channel.</p>
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<p>I plan to make a jig that the whole neck will mount solidly below. Hopefully not having to remove the neck until all routing is complete, removal, back filling, creating the new channel. The old hardwood rod cap strip is less than 1/4 wide so if the new rod requires a 1/4 slot, I can remove and rechannel all with the same bit.</p>
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<p>First, Route, with multiple passes, down to flatten out the old rod channel. </p>
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<p>Second, back fill the channel with a mahogany filler strip, glue in.</p>
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<p>Third, Route for new rod depth and width, make clearance for adjuster nut.</p>
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<p>Reattach the fingerboard, test the rod.</p>
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<p>Perform a neck reset if needed.</p>
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<p>Thanks again everyone.</p>
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<p>John</p>
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<p></p> Everyone, thank you for your…tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2017-01-03:2177249:Comment:1658892017-01-03T06:03:59.559ZJohn Yungbluthhttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/JohnYungbluth
<p>Everyone, thank you for your insights.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Part 1</p>
<p></p>
<p>I'm in neutral with my guitar. I need to read up on installing a 2 way truss rod assembly properly. Determine if there is one available to fit the guitar, build a functional stable jig for doing the routing process correctly by holding everything securely. The jig I built years ago was not stable enough, and all I kept was the rail and sled assembly. So I have some jig education in my near…</p>
<p>Everyone, thank you for your insights.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Part 1</p>
<p></p>
<p>I'm in neutral with my guitar. I need to read up on installing a 2 way truss rod assembly properly. Determine if there is one available to fit the guitar, build a functional stable jig for doing the routing process correctly by holding everything securely. The jig I built years ago was not stable enough, and all I kept was the rail and sled assembly. So I have some jig education in my near future.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Any pictures of what anyone uses would be very beneficial. </p>
<p></p>
<p>Part 2 </p>
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<p>Dave, re-reading your second response I see that you state the rod is broken on your guitar. If I follow your description correctly, the rod must have snapped off at the back end of the barrel nut if you want to cut more threads onto the remaining rod. Do you have the barrel nut? If so, can they remove the broken off piece from the nut, and get thread specifications from it or the piece of rod?</p>
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<p>Out for any insight from anyone, this is what I have done.</p>
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<p>I've run into an unexpected result when going to the hardware store, they only carried course threads, industry standards say that would be a .8mm pitch for 5mm, and the rod and nut will not thread. Fine threads should be .5mm pitch. 4mm bolts and nuts are too small. 6mm, too large.</p>
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<p>Here is what I have measured from my rod and nut with my digital calipers.</p>
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<p>Diameter rod : 5mm</p>
<p>Diameter of threads: 4.65mm</p>
<p>Pitch*: .8mm</p>
<p>*This I measured by marking the rod and barrel nut, measuring the depth of the rod inside the nut. Making 10 full revolutions, re-measuring the depth of the rod to get a second reading. Subtract first from the second to get the distance 8.1mm, that the nut traveled, divide by 10 =approx. .8mm </p>
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<p>I'm going by a shop tomorrow that will measure the pitch for me. </p>
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<p>Am I making a wrong assumption that a 5mm rod would equate to a 5mm thread? </p>
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<p>Here a some other measurements from the rod.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Total length, base plate and rod combined: 366mm</p>
<p>Length from base plate to end of rod: 363mm</p>
<p>Length of threads: 15mm</p>
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<p>Base plate</p>
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<p>Thickness: 3mm</p>
<p>plate dimensions: 10mm x 10mm</p>
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<p>Barrel nut</p>
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<p>Length: 20mm</p>
<p>Diameter: 9mm</p>
<p>Allen key: 5mm</p>
<p></p>
<p>Dave maybe you would want the option of just removing the neck, leaving the fingerboard attached, this would give access to replacing or re-threading the rod. Give it a neck reset at the same time and be ready for the next 30 years. Just my thoughts as mine becomes more complicated.</p> I'm with Brian on this one, …tag:fretsnet.ning.com,2016-12-31:2177249:Comment:1651542016-12-31T22:43:22.054ZRussell Vancehttp://fretsnet.ning.com/profile/RussellVance
<p>I'm with Brian on this one, a double acting rod "drop in" repair fixes the problem once and for all. </p>
<p>However, to check threads I have a handful of labelled "likely suspect" nuts, bolts and ferrules, which cost nothing much, to check threads. Reason I have these is that when Tonepros shifted production centers in Asia they also changed their metric threads on their tail piece studs from something to something else - which became a compatibility nightmare. Not to mention Schaller…</p>
<p>I'm with Brian on this one, a double acting rod "drop in" repair fixes the problem once and for all. </p>
<p>However, to check threads I have a handful of labelled "likely suspect" nuts, bolts and ferrules, which cost nothing much, to check threads. Reason I have these is that when Tonepros shifted production centers in Asia they also changed their metric threads on their tail piece studs from something to something else - which became a compatibility nightmare. Not to mention Schaller studs (Germany) which were incompatible with all Tonepros metric threads from the get go. Tonepros also make Imperial threaded components which further adds to the mix.</p>
<p>I have TPI gauges but generally like to thread check against a know component just to feel assured. Belt and braces sort of thing.</p>
<p>Rusty.</p>