6 saddle bridge or 12 saddle, which works for you?
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johnashfield
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6 saddle bridge or 12 saddle, which works for you?
OK, who here has a 12 string with a 6 saddle bridge that properly intonates and plays in tune up and down the neck.
Who here has had to have a luthier put the 12 saddle bridge on, sometimes involving moving the baseplate, and had other issues arise, such as the pickups being off center, etc?
I really want to know.
Who here has had to have a luthier put the 12 saddle bridge on, sometimes involving moving the baseplate, and had other issues arise, such as the pickups being off center, etc?
I really want to know.
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johnashfield
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Oh, just to stand up and be counted, I had to have a 12 saddle bridge put on as the guitar (with the 6 saddle bridge) would not intonate, even with Rickenbacker strings (I know, amazing huh). Of course putting the 12 saddle bridge on involved more drama than should be neccesary with a quality instrument. Yes the pickups are off center.
Also, does anyone buy Rickenbacker's arguement that a properly intonated 12 string sounds bad? And that a out of tune badly intonated guitar sounds better?
Also, does anyone buy Rickenbacker's arguement that a properly intonated 12 string sounds bad? And that a out of tune badly intonated guitar sounds better?
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profjeff
Hello John:
I just put a 12 saddle bridge on my Rick 360/12 about two weeks ago. It seemed to fit just fine on the baseplate. I ground down the apexes of the saddles and rounded them with a mini Dremel tool and some emery paper. I hate sharp edges on my bridge because I use my right palm to damp the strings. Then I used a Dremel mini cut off wheel to score the grooves for the strings, eventually finishing them off with a small file and some emery paper.
I was able to line up the strings with the pickups pretty well. The high and low E strings are a bit too far inward over the bridge pickup, but they line up perfectly with the neck pickup. I cannot remember how they aligned when I had the 6 saddle bridge on. Overall, everything works very well and the guitar intonates perfectly.
I did cut the spring on the low E string in half because the bridge piece needed to be pretty close to the flanged edge. Also, the spring on my octave G string was not nearly long enough, so I salvaged a longer one from my old bridge. So far so good. It took a couple of days and two different sets of strings before I had everything set up the way I like. I ended up putting a set of Pyramid flatwounds on the guitar and it feels and sounds great.
I will post an image of my bridge on my website this weekend.
--jeff
http://home.attbi.com/~drjeffreyb
I just put a 12 saddle bridge on my Rick 360/12 about two weeks ago. It seemed to fit just fine on the baseplate. I ground down the apexes of the saddles and rounded them with a mini Dremel tool and some emery paper. I hate sharp edges on my bridge because I use my right palm to damp the strings. Then I used a Dremel mini cut off wheel to score the grooves for the strings, eventually finishing them off with a small file and some emery paper.
I was able to line up the strings with the pickups pretty well. The high and low E strings are a bit too far inward over the bridge pickup, but they line up perfectly with the neck pickup. I cannot remember how they aligned when I had the 6 saddle bridge on. Overall, everything works very well and the guitar intonates perfectly.
I did cut the spring on the low E string in half because the bridge piece needed to be pretty close to the flanged edge. Also, the spring on my octave G string was not nearly long enough, so I salvaged a longer one from my old bridge. So far so good. It took a couple of days and two different sets of strings before I had everything set up the way I like. I ended up putting a set of Pyramid flatwounds on the guitar and it feels and sounds great.
I will post an image of my bridge on my website this weekend.
--jeff
http://home.attbi.com/~drjeffreyb
I installed the 12 saddle. I relocated the base plate with forum posts and photos Mark sent. No problem with saddle adjustment.
The string alignment across the pickups bothered me. I moved the bridge pu about 1/8" down, the grommet covers the old screw hole. I also replaced the trapeze with the 12 hole replacement offered by the Dr.
Plays great and in tune.
The string alignment across the pickups bothered me. I moved the bridge pu about 1/8" down, the grommet covers the old screw hole. I also replaced the trapeze with the 12 hole replacement offered by the Dr.
Plays great and in tune.
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profjeff
The plate on my guitar is in its original location. Only the low E string saddle is close to the chassis. As I said, I cut the spring in half. I tried removing the spring altogether, but I noticed an irritating vibration on the low E.
Here's a link to a photo of the 12 string bridge taken with a set of roundwounds.
http://www.coe.unco.edu/jeffbauer/bridge.jpg
I recently installed flatwounds...the saddles have been adjusted accordingly. As I said, no major problems so far. This guitar gets alot of playing time. I have found that it goes great with the acoustic guitar and the rest of the instruments in our praise band at church. I prefer my Fender Hot Rod Deluxe (w/Celestion V-30) with this guitar onstage. This rig gives the Rick 12 more bottom end and a nice shimmery top.
http://home.attbi.com/~drjeffreyb
Here's a link to a photo of the 12 string bridge taken with a set of roundwounds.
http://www.coe.unco.edu/jeffbauer/bridge.jpg
I recently installed flatwounds...the saddles have been adjusted accordingly. As I said, no major problems so far. This guitar gets alot of playing time. I have found that it goes great with the acoustic guitar and the rest of the instruments in our praise band at church. I prefer my Fender Hot Rod Deluxe (w/Celestion V-30) with this guitar onstage. This rig gives the Rick 12 more bottom end and a nice shimmery top.
http://home.attbi.com/~drjeffreyb
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rickplayer
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justonwo
Scott,
Do a search for the thread titled "why we don't just move the bridge" and look at John Hall's post on July 12 at 12:31.
"A guitar is really a huge bunch of compromises because everything affects everything else and certain simplifications (i.e. straight frets that serve all six strings) make any guitar quite imperfect. Different people hear these imperfections in very individual fashion too, so what I prefer may not suit you at all. As an example, an absolutely perfectly intoned 12 stringer is one of the most unattractive sounds you'll ever hear as some of the normal imperfections are what provide the distinctive character." -John Hall
Do a search for the thread titled "why we don't just move the bridge" and look at John Hall's post on July 12 at 12:31.
"A guitar is really a huge bunch of compromises because everything affects everything else and certain simplifications (i.e. straight frets that serve all six strings) make any guitar quite imperfect. Different people hear these imperfections in very individual fashion too, so what I prefer may not suit you at all. As an example, an absolutely perfectly intoned 12 stringer is one of the most unattractive sounds you'll ever hear as some of the normal imperfections are what provide the distinctive character." -John Hall
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johnashfield
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Tommy from RIC actually told me that the official line there is that "A perfectly in tune 12 string would sound bad"
Of course RIC should have that statement on the website and in the catalog by their 12 string guitars. "These instruments play out of tune and you won't be able to tune them without spending more money on a new bridge and doing a lot of work, preferably by a luthier." That would be honest. Of course, who would still buy them then?
John Hall's statement is also strange because yes, a guitar is a bunch of compromises with the tuning, but so is a piano, or any other tempered instrument. No one would ever say an out of tune piano sounds better. Or that bands and orchestras sound better out of tune. Could you imagine a company like Steinway saying, our pianos sound better out of tune? Or actually the president or owner of Steinway saying something like that?
Yes, everyone hears these imperfections slightly differently, but out of tune octaves sound horrible!
Compromises in tuning came about so one could play in different keys using the same instrument.
A perfectly intoned 12 string, sounds....IN TUNE!
12 strings with bad intonation sound especially bad with other guitars, and keyboards, and singers.
Even with the 12 saddle bridge, the guitars arte not perfectly intonated. Nothing could be really. But come on.
The fact that John Hall actually says in public that out of tune guitars sound better is, well I don't know, but isn't that kinda strange? Or is it an excuse?
In any event I love my guitar now.
Of course RIC should have that statement on the website and in the catalog by their 12 string guitars. "These instruments play out of tune and you won't be able to tune them without spending more money on a new bridge and doing a lot of work, preferably by a luthier." That would be honest. Of course, who would still buy them then?
John Hall's statement is also strange because yes, a guitar is a bunch of compromises with the tuning, but so is a piano, or any other tempered instrument. No one would ever say an out of tune piano sounds better. Or that bands and orchestras sound better out of tune. Could you imagine a company like Steinway saying, our pianos sound better out of tune? Or actually the president or owner of Steinway saying something like that?
Yes, everyone hears these imperfections slightly differently, but out of tune octaves sound horrible!
Compromises in tuning came about so one could play in different keys using the same instrument.
A perfectly intoned 12 string, sounds....IN TUNE!
12 strings with bad intonation sound especially bad with other guitars, and keyboards, and singers.
Even with the 12 saddle bridge, the guitars arte not perfectly intonated. Nothing could be really. But come on.
The fact that John Hall actually says in public that out of tune guitars sound better is, well I don't know, but isn't that kinda strange? Or is it an excuse?
In any event I love my guitar now.
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rickplayer
- Veteran RRF member
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- Joined: Wed May 30, 2001 7:14 am
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rickplayer
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 88
- Joined: Wed May 30, 2001 7:14 am




