Anyhow, when I took it off the shelf, it had 3 strings on it and they were a combination of black and green! The frets were pretty much the same!

Fast forward to earlier today. I received my package of strings (webstrings.com, ever use em?) so I got to work. Using my undeserved sense of confidence brought on by the Dan Erlewine book, I got to work on it.

I started by polishing the green frets, very happy to find out that there actually was metal under all that green! It's got an adjustable bridge which I find is cool, 2 screws on either side adjusts the height of the bridge. I brought the treble strings up a touch, but nothing more. Surprisingly, after stringing up, the truss rod did not need adjustment, it was dead flat with no dead stops anywhere!

I encountered a problem with the low E string. While tuning it to pitch, the peg would jump out once I got higher than a B. I noticed that the bridge was way to worn out. someone may be able to do something about it, but I had a better idea...

I took the low E off and tuned the guitar to open G! I'm loving it!
I actually recorded a little something, note that
a. I'm not well versed in open G
b. I barely ever play slide
That said, the guitar sounds good! the short scale makes it good for my style of playing!
http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page_so ... ID=6525769
And that's my story for the day!
