Neck concavity.....

Anything to do with Fender, Burns and other guitars; also amps, effects units including eTap, plus any other music making accessories

Moderators: David Martin, dave robinson, Iain Purdon, George Geddes

Re: Neck concavity.....

Postby ecca » Sat Mar 12, 2011 11:37 pm

Henry... you're absolutely correct about the situation beyond the 12th fret..... I hadn't thought about that.
I now come back to my original thoughts about the best thing being a flat neck........ ?????
I don't quite know how this talk about pick-ups crept into this thread but me being the world's worst for bargeing into other people's threads..... I couldn't give a monkey's..... carry on.

How do you spell bargeing ?
ecca
 

Re: Neck concavity.....

Postby neil2726 » Sun Mar 13, 2011 12:12 am

B A R G I N G :D
neil2726
 
Posts: 1054
Joined: Wed Sep 16, 2009 3:36 pm
Full Real Name: Neil Sutton

Re: Neck concavity.....

Postby ecca » Sun Mar 13, 2011 12:54 am

I tried that but the bottle of white wine consumed prevented my correct assimilation of its correctness.
(eh ?)
ecca
 

Re: Neck concavity.....

Postby ELET » Sun Mar 13, 2011 4:45 pm

ecca wrote:Henry... you're absolutely correct about the situation beyond the 12th fret..... I hadn't thought about that.
I now come back to my original thoughts about the best thing being a flat neck........ ?????
I don't quite know how this talk about pick-ups crept into this thread but me being the world's worst for bargeing into other people's threads..... I couldn't give a monkey's..... carry on.

How do you spell bargeing ?


Ok no more mention of pickups, (at least for now). Some players can get away with a lot less neck relief than others, if you're a light picker and can cope with a slightly higher action a flat fingerboard would probably be fine as the vibrating string shouldn't buzz against the fret above the one you're playing. I don't pick the strings very hard but do have a small amount of neck relief on my guitars in order to allow for tunes like "The Savage" where I find that aggressive pick attack is needed to get something like the original sound. I try and set my guitars up so that the distance between the top of the 12th fret and the bottom of the low E string is just a nats under 2mm, for the top E I take it down as low as I can get away with. As I do a fair bit of string bending I find that I have to compromise as a too low an action results in string "choking" when I push them across the fingerboard. I once bought a Strat from a strictly Shadows player who never really bent strings, the action was very low and there was virtually no neck relief, the guitar played fine as long as I picked very lightly and didn't attempt any string bends but I had to take the action up and add a bit more relief to suit my style.
ELET
 

Previous

Return to Gear

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 64 guests

Ads by Google
These advertisements are selected and placed by Google to assist with the cost of site maintenance.
ShadowMusic is not responsible for the content of external advertisements.