It is mainly on the E string where there is too much vibration and the notes are not defined enough!
Thanks!
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
In pretty much all of these cases, doing exactly what you did should fix any of these standard issues when switching to a smaller gauge of a similarly-constructed string.antonius wrote:I was surprised at the big difference a slight adjustment of the rods made.
First alternately hold the E string down, then the g string down with both hands, one on the first fret and one at the last fret, you should have a slight space in the middle somewhere near the 12th fret do not put any pressure on the neck itself, in other words don't bend it at all, if the string touches all along the length of the neck it needs to be loosened a little bit. Take off the TRC and use a 1/4" nutdriver and loosen the truss rods a little bit and see if that helps, only turn them counterclockwise looking from above maybe an 1/8 to a 1/4 of a turn, very easy to do, then check, etc.. I used D'addario Blue steels (I think, they were cryogenically treated) in that gauge for several years, they are light. When I adjust a neck I leave the Truss Rod Cover off for several days and let the neck settle in, it may need to be adjusted more than once. Everyone should know how to do it.faceman wrote:As I have mentioned in a previous thread, I"ve strung my Ric 4003 with new D'Addrios but in a lighter gauge (the E string is only 100, opposed to the 105 that was on before). I think something may need adjusting because of this - do I need to adjust the string height or truss-road? If it is the truss rod, how does one go about doing this and by how much should I adjust it?
It is mainly on the E string where there is too much vibration and the notes are not defined enough!![]()
Thanks!