rainbowreality Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I came across this great tool but unfortunately they don't make a version for bass (boo!) - does anyone know anywhere that does? https://www.guitarbuilding.solutions/product-page/luthier-tools-string-action-gauge 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago A Stratocaster neck at the octave is 52mm wide and a Precision is 56mm wide, so according to the overlap I see on the photo, it will work for both with the progressive radius height. 1 Quote
rainbowreality Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 4 minutes ago, Hellzero said: A Stratocaster neck at the octave is 52mm wide and a Precision is 56mm wide, so according to the overlap I see on the photo, it will work for both with the progressive radius height. Thanks for the help! I'd emailed the company and they replied to say that it's not compatible with bass (and they've since added a not on the description). Not saying you're wrong at all but strange they didn't make the same observation, maybe I'll email them again with what you've said! Quote
Hellzero Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago You can do the same as this with an Allen wrench of 1.5mm (or whatever reference string height you use). Simply put the Allen wrench under the highest pitched (G or C) string of your bass and raise or lower the saddle until the action is at the desired height. Repeat this for all other strings and set the intonation. And then simply add a fourth of turn to each of the two height saddle screws on the next lower string, then half turn for the next one, then 3/4th of turn on the following one, then a full turn for the other and a full and a fourth turn for the B if you own a sixer bass: This will make exactly the same as this radius gauge at a deliriously low cost... I've been setting up all my basses this way since more than 3 decades. Adding 1/4th turn more than the previous ones simply perfectly raises the height according to the exact radius of your instrument's neck. 2 Quote
PaulThePlug Posted 58 minutes ago Posted 58 minutes ago Maybe 'guitarbuilding' are basing(!) the Not For Bass on the basis that Guitar are ballpark 2 / 1.5mm and a Bass ballpark 2.5 / 2mm... But, i likes @Hellzero simplicity, and savings as well as suiting all radii... Saddle screws M3 have a 'pitch' of 0.5mm, so half a turn extra per string saddle would add 0.25 of a mm in height. 1 Quote
rainbowreality Posted 51 minutes ago Author Posted 51 minutes ago (edited) 12 minutes ago, PaulThePlug said: Maybe 'guitarbuilding' are basing(!) the Not For Bass on the basis that Guitar are ballpark 2 / 1.5mm and a Bass ballpark 2.5 / 2mm... Good point but you can raise he string height by going down a fret or two with their thingymejig Edited 44 minutes ago by rainbowreality Quote
rainbowreality Posted 49 minutes ago Author Posted 49 minutes ago 28 minutes ago, Hellzero said: You can do the same as this with an Allen wrench of 1.5mm (or whatever reference string height you use). Simply put the Allen wrench under the highest pitched (G or C) string of your bass and raise or lower the saddle until the action is at the desired height. Repeat this for all other strings and set the intonation. And then simply add a fourth of turn to each of the two height saddle screws on the next lower string, then half turn for the next one, then 3/4th of turn on the following one, then a full turn for the other and a full and a fourth turn for the B if you own a sixer bass: This will make exactly the same as this radius gauge at a deliriously low cost... I've been setting up all my basses this way since more than 3 decades. Adding 1/4th turn more than the previous ones simply perfectly raises the height according to the exact radius of your instrument's neck. That's so obvious when you explain it! I'm going to try it, thank you! 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.