I have seen it many times. The bridge is located at the wrong place, and the guitar has a very bad intonation. There are three ways to solve it as I see it. Replace the bridge with one that has the saddle and the holes at the right place. Reroute and redrill the old bridge, or reroute only the saddle slot.
This time it's an early '70s D-35. I usually remake both the slot and the holes on the old bridge, sometimes also making new bridgeplate. This prevents one from lifting the bridge. I always prefer to avoid this, I think a reglued or new bridge can effect the sound in a bad way on an old guitar.
How do you do? :-)
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The problem there will be that the saddle gets too close to the holes, and string break angle will be too much, bending the saddle forward. But yes, it's the less time consuming way, so it's attractive to me too.
This time, I have to move it about 2,2 mm backwards, so I think I have to replace the holes also.
I have a 1977 D-28 with this problem. Martin warranty covered moving the saddle (very close to the bridge pins), which improved things. It is possible Martin would cover putting on an oversized bridge but I don't think that would look right. When I feel comfortable with doing the job, I think I would plug the bridge plate and top, make a new bridge with the saddle in the correct position, and the pins placed appropriately. Dan Erlewine makes plugs that are a sandwich of rosewood, spruce and Ebony for doing this with the bridge in place. One could also use Dan's bridge plate repair tool.
Joshua
This is the critical piece of information. I just had to vet (and scotch) a potential deal on a very nice sounding Martin that had already had the factory fix on saddle placement, as far back as it could possibly go. It was still terribly off. It is possible to make a new bridge with an identical footprint but with the bridgepin holes moved way back and the saddle moved way back that will intonate correctly. On this particular guitar, it would have been extreme and it would have looked rather weird. What nixed the deal was that it also urgently needed a neck reset and a complete plane and refret as well. This was a financial investment (on top of the generous asking price) that totaled more than the guitar was worth.
One other fix, which works better on mandolins than on guitars, is to replace the board with one with a slightly shorter scale. Again, you have to figure how much you're willing to invest in any particular instrument.
I have a little page on intonation here that might be of interest.
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