Gibson SG advice...

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bostonfan2

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I have a new SG special (U.S.A.) which at 750.00 is toward the lower end of the available models, plays and sounds great, however it does not stay in tune near as well as my Hamer Sceptor, the tuners seem cheap and not very tight,
any recomendations for quality replacements? thanx.....Bostonfan2
 
Sperzel locking.......I think that is how it is spelled. Just ask for them, your tech will know.

They have treated me right on my Studio LP.
 
I have a worn special, and I had to tighten the nuts right under where the strings are wound....they were loose as crap.......and when I changed those useless "brite wires"( or whatever those horrible strings are) to 10's, mine now sounds like a glossy expensive model........SG's are great !.......................gibs:cool:
 
I don't know what they used for tuners, but if they aren't Grovers, grab some. I don't know about your SG, but I own an SG Supreme, and it took almost 6 months before the neck settled in, and it required frequent truss rod sdjustments until it did. Your issue may be the neck, but I would start by making sure the tuners are tight and the strings are good.-Richie
 
I know I could take my 67 V and use my body as a pivot point, and bend the neck and body against my body and make it go up a 1/4 tone or so..:o
 
I had an sg standard years ago, an early 70's model. Sold it in the eighties to a kid across the street who was obsessed with AC/DC, wish I still had it ! It did not stay in tune as well as other guitars I've had, I think it may be at least partly due to its design; the long thin mahogany neck which is fairly unique to the SG. They seem to have that reputation. New tuners may help, but I have had some guitars with cheap tuners that stayed in tune very well. Put some graphite in the nut grooves, stretch your strings after you put them on, you might need to experiment with how you tune it; like always come UP to the proper pitch. Also make sure that you are not inadvertently putting a little pressure on the neck in relation to the body as you play it, like what mixmkr is referring to. Also, does it have the string gauge on it that you are used to? Lighter strings will tend be pulled or pushed slightly out of tune by fingers that are used to a heavier gauge. Try looking on the net for EXPERT advice (sites like Stewart-McDonald) on alleviating this problem with Gibson style guitars. Cool guitar, though- congrats!
 
Thanks for all the replys, very helpful,
my taylor comes standard with grovers they almost never go out of tune so i think i will try grovers on the SG as well.

Bostonfan2
 
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