I know most of you are oppossed to acoustic/electrics and I wholeheartedly agree.
My problem is with unbalanced string output when install bone saddles, and the culprit is usually the hole that was drilled to fish the wire through. I've tried shimming, plugging the hole, looser fitting saddles,sacrificing a chicken...nothing gives me the results I'm looking for. I'm hoping one of you experts could point me in the right direction. Any advice is appreciated.
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Sounds like you have a problem with the bottom of the saddle being flat and perpendicular to the sides. I generally sand the bottom of saddles on a disc sander that I know is set square. After that I usually give it a couple passes on my marble stone covered with 120 and then check flatness against my straight edge. If I can see any light coming between my straight edge and the bottom of the saddle I know I will usually have some uneven output. Or you may have stumbled upon one of those guitars that puts up a fight and tests your patience.
Thanks Gary I'll try that.I did check mine with a metal ruler and saw light.
But have you ever noticed the hole to be a problem? For example, the factory drills the hole for the wire above the low E. The low E is where I'm getting weaker signal. I think it's due to there being LESS reinforcement under the UST at that point in the slot. What do you think? I'm sure you have done more of these jobs than I.
The plastic saddle works well. So does the pickup and preamp. I have come across your break angle theory
on other guitars.Thanks Len.
I had this problem the other day on a customers guitar in for action lowering and inotation
Got it playing and sounding great acoustically, then plugged it in and lots of dead notes.
After a lot of trial and error with shaping the bottom of the saddle for better contact, I finally tried this-
I cut the saddle into three segments, beteen the B and G and between the A and D strings
Each segment only has to contact the transducer under 2 strings rather than all 6.
It worked great a huge improvement
That's a good idea Jeff. I might just try that. Did you leave space between the saddles or where they butted against each other.
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