I am new to the forums and new to Rickenbacker ownership. Took delivery of my 4003 Fireglo in October 2011 so it's not exactly "brand new" anymore. It was built the first week of March 2011. Absolutely beautiful in so many ways. I am very impressed with the sound, finish and workmanship. A real piece of art! I cannot believe it's mine everytime I take it out of the case.
So far I've removed the treble p'up cover, adjusted the pole pieces a bit and swapped out the old strings. Boy did this change the sound. I didn't realize how dead the old strings were. I've also tweaked the truss rods 1/4 turn so far. This was actually done in two 1/8 turn adjustments. Once when I first got it and once when I replaced the strings this past Saturday.
This brings me to a question. I've read everywhere that the neck needs to be COMPLETELY straight, no relief at all. After I added my new strings (Rickenbacker brand and gauge), I decided to check the neck with a straight edge. I still had some relief, maybe around 1/8 an inch at about the 5th and 7th fret area. So I added the second 1/8 turn on the rods. This was two days ago and I still have some relief. At that time I also had to raise the bridge on the E side quite a bit to get the E string to just a slight buzzing against the frets. I assume it was a combo of the relief being removed and the addition of new strings. Action is still acceptable and as of last night, no buzzing at all.
Should I continue to tighten the truss rods to pull out all of the relief? It plays well, the intonation is good and I am very happy with the sound. Just wondering if more tweaking will make it play/sound even better or if it will just make me have to raise the action even more to prevent buzzing strings. Oh, and thanks to the forum and Joeys bass notes. I would have never tried making adjustments on my own without all this info, even though I am quite handy.
I'll throw a few pics on here and add my bass to the register later tonight
Thanks for any suggestions, comments!
Barry





