M
MatchBookNotes
New member
Hey, would it be terribly difficult to do this myself or should I bone up the 30-80 dollars for long and mcdonalds to do this for me, and possibly ground my guitar properly, could i also do that myself?
, it is just that some people don't have any mechanical abilitys to do a simple procedure.The truss rod is not for adjusting the action. It is to adjust the neck bow. Certainly, it will EFFECT the action, but it is far from a precise adjustment. If you want it done right, a good shop (assuming there is one available to you) is good idea.
Light
"Cowards can never be moral."
M.K. Gandhi
I disagree with you on this one if adjust rod your are lowering or raising your
action to some degree. Of course you can ajust action at the bridge as well.
In fact it is a combination of these two that usually take you to that magical
sweet spot.
For example if you tighten you truss rod you are reducing bow thus pulling the head stock back, your also bringing the strings closer to the neck by changing the angle from the bridge to the nut. This will usually make the action much lowered on the first 5 frets especially. If it's possible I would prefer to try this rather than lowering strings slots especially on a new guitar.
Matchbook if you just need to lower the action at the basic open chord position I would tighten up 1/4 turn let it set for 20 minutes and see if it
fixes you problem. You can always loosen it up 1/4 and put it back where it
was. If your worried about turning this nut there is know way I would take the neck off you'll have a lot more going on if you result to that route.
If you have terribly high action you should be able to lower it at the bridge
but I you go that route you'll end up having the work with the intonation.
If that is the case I would just take it is for a setup or do a google search
there are a million articles on doing this. I myself feel taking the neck off and
shimming it is an absolute last resort in your case with out seeing it.
Light is correct. The purpose of the truss rod is to counteract the pull of the strings and compensate for the introduction of too much bow. It is not to raise or lower the action and has absolutely minimal effect of the neck angle. Your nut will not be lowered or raised in relation to the bridge. If it is your yanking on it too much and your going to cause some serious damage. You want as flat a fingerboard as possible with just enough relief to stop the strings natural vibrating arc from buzzing on frets further up the fretboard.
The action of a guitar is adjusted at the saddle. If you can't get it right from there you need to look at the neck angle but only then. The nut should be cut to act as another fret, same hight as the first fret or if your nervous very slightly higher. Too high and you'll have intonation problems.

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I know what the purpose of truss rod is for, and know one is talking about going crazy "yanking on it". Your telling me reducing the bow in the neck is not going to pull the head stock back and reduce the distance between the bottom of the string and the top of the first fret and in doing so create a lower action "to some degree" . Every time you change the gauge of your
strings you need to adjust your truss rod to compensate for it. If you put
light guage strings on a guitar that has medium heavy gauge strings the
strings may well even be laying of top of the first fret. Your not going to toss the nut and cut a taller one your going to reduce the tension on the truss rod and regain your proper proper relief which inversed.
I agree with you on trying to keep the neck as straight as possible. And it is a no brainer that you raise the bridge and lower the brigde for major adustment.
But on a new guitar once you put your prefered string on the the first thing your going to do is adjust the truss rod like you say to get the proper relief.
With out seeing the guitar and what is actually happening there is no way to
tell what it really needs but turning the truss rod nut 1/4 of turn is not going to hurt it UNLESS it is already at its limit. I actually think when you get everything else setup perfectly the truss adjustment is the last fine
increment to a setups action. Hey it works for me any way I have 23 guitars and 5 mandolins and have never paid a dime to some one such as yourself![]()

Regardless of the type, an adjustable truss rod affects only the shaft of the neck, the flexible portion from the nut to the thick part at the heel. The idea is to control the straightness of the neck by bending it backward against the pull of the strings, if necessary. But there are a few points of confusion about the utility of truss rods.
I think the second most important piece of misinformation is that a truss rod will prevent the eventual need for resetting the neck. I'll be dealing with the neck reset issue in future articles, so for now I'll just say that a truss rod has absolutely no effect on neck angle.
The single most common misconception is that truss rods are for adjusting action or intonation. While adjusting the truss rod does affect the playing action, that's a side effect and not the purpose for the adjustment. As a general rule, once the nut and truss rod are set, all action adjustment is done at the bridge, by raising or lowering the saddle. Intonation is affected by action, too, so correcting the action may improve intonation, but again, that's a side effect.
I disagree with you on this one if adjust rod your are lowering or raising your
action to some degree.
I agree with you about the truss rod but if the Op cannot get the action right by lowering the bridge i think it is then time to take it to a tech who knows the drill about getting the action right. it is never a good Idea to shim the neck when you can work on the bridge and nut to get the action right, shimming the neck would be my very last resort .You can disagree all you want, but your wrong. As I said, the truss rod will effect the action, but it does NOT adjust it. End of story.
Oh, and shimming the neck is fine, if you can't get the action where it needs to be by adjusting the bridge. But use the bridge first, and see if you can get what you need that way. If not, then you can start to think about shimming the neck.
Light
...I disagree with you on this one if adjust rod your are lowering or raising your action to some degree...
AndThe important thing is to get the geometry correct.
Action is adjusted at the nut and the bridge. Simple as that.