Removal of The Truss Rods in a 381
Moderator: jingle_jangle
Removal of The Truss Rods in a 381
In my 381 V69 I want to know if;
"I can remove the truss rods thru the 2 holes at the end of the neck?"
I am hoping that I can remove the neck pickup, remove the top nuts and slide the rods out the holes. Am I dreaming?
Thanks
"I can remove the truss rods thru the 2 holes at the end of the neck?"
I am hoping that I can remove the neck pickup, remove the top nuts and slide the rods out the holes. Am I dreaming?
Thanks
The old Rickenbacker truss rods can be easily removed, they just slide out of the headstock end when the nuts and bar are removed. Thats because they are simple metal bars that are not fastened to anything at the other end.
The modern ones aint like that
The modern ones aint like that
The email address shown is down, you can email me at [email protected]
Sorry for the confusion, however, I'm not sure if these responses actually answer the original question. YES, you can remove the truss rod from the neck-end if you remove the pickup to expose the hole, though I'm not sure why you would prefer this to sliding it out of the headstock cavity.
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights do make a left.
Well, we did remove the truss rods today.
Let me back up, the neck was adjusted to 4/64ths between the 12th fret and the bottom of the Low E string. In a matter of days it moved to 7/64ths. The rods did not seem to be spinning and seemed tight but the neck still would not hold the set.
Upon removal everything looked good, the end nuts were tight, the top plate was intact, the rods were wrapped in masking tape. The only exception was that, one rod was straight and the second (Under the High E) was bent in a strong curve. We also thought there might be a little wood compression where the end nuts contact the wood in the neck so there are plans afoot to shore that part up and we will either straighten or curve the opposing rod and see if that helps.
I will let you know how things turn out . . .
Let me back up, the neck was adjusted to 4/64ths between the 12th fret and the bottom of the Low E string. In a matter of days it moved to 7/64ths. The rods did not seem to be spinning and seemed tight but the neck still would not hold the set.
Upon removal everything looked good, the end nuts were tight, the top plate was intact, the rods were wrapped in masking tape. The only exception was that, one rod was straight and the second (Under the High E) was bent in a strong curve. We also thought there might be a little wood compression where the end nuts contact the wood in the neck so there are plans afoot to shore that part up and we will either straighten or curve the opposing rod and see if that helps.
I will let you know how things turn out . . .
[color=##FF0000]WOO HOO ! ! ! ! ![/color]
Just got it back from Steve Soest and all I can say is, "[color=##0000FF]BUTTER[/color]".
It plays like a dream and is holding the neck set.
The one bent truss rod was straightened, the heel end of the neck where the star washer sits was reinforced with glue and 2 more washers were added. The neck was then set with a back bow and allowed to stabilize, then tuned to the current awesome set.
Thanks Steve and John Hall . . .
Just got it back from Steve Soest and all I can say is, "[color=##0000FF]BUTTER[/color]".
It plays like a dream and is holding the neck set.
The one bent truss rod was straightened, the heel end of the neck where the star washer sits was reinforced with glue and 2 more washers were added. The neck was then set with a back bow and allowed to stabilize, then tuned to the current awesome set.
Thanks Steve and John Hall . . .

