360-12 without strings
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
360-12 without strings
I acquired a 360-12 with some modest head damaged that will require taking the strings off for a few days to re-glue/fill some chips/cracks. Should I worry about adjusting the truss bars to loosest position to avoid any damage-- shouldn't be more than a week.
Re: 360-12 without strings
Robert, although I am not a luthier, I would recommend backing off the tension on the rods for that length of time. I have done this on a couple of my guitars when I had them 'stringless' for longer than a day. Just remember to take it slow when you do restring them and retension the rods.
This thread probably belongs in The Vibrola section.
This thread probably belongs in The Vibrola section.
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
Re: 360-12 without strings
I left the strings off of "Rosie" for over a YEAR as I attended to other matters. It did not affect the neck at all. She set up beautifully afterward.
Re: 360-12 without strings
Belloff's back! What's up duder? I forget, is Rosie still there with you? You buy and sell her so much I can't keep track! 
Re: 360-12 without strings
No, Rosie is with someone else. I'm doing good,just really busy. I just finsihed up a project to put up a Victorian Street clock in my hometown so things have eased a bit. Good to stop by.
Re: 360-12 without strings
I got to play Rosie today! She's doing great.
Re: 360-12 without strings
You can lock the neck in straight position by putting a tension to the neck similar to the downforce produced by the string pull tension.
Use a clamp and a piece of tough wood and two pieces of small wood in the end of the long wood piece and one on the top of fret board in the middle - to protect finish and frets. You can now easily emulate the string tension while the strings are removed. The string pull works like a downforce on the neck - and it is this downforce you can subsitute by gently pressing the fret board and the long piece of wood gently against each other with a light clamp on - but only just enough to keep the neck straight when the strings removed.
Use a clamp and a piece of tough wood and two pieces of small wood in the end of the long wood piece and one on the top of fret board in the middle - to protect finish and frets. You can now easily emulate the string tension while the strings are removed. The string pull works like a downforce on the neck - and it is this downforce you can subsitute by gently pressing the fret board and the long piece of wood gently against each other with a light clamp on - but only just enough to keep the neck straight when the strings removed.
