TBurst Std
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Cagey said:Also, the old trick of sighting down the neck to decide whether it's bowed, relieved or twisted is NFG.
+1000
Someone sticky this!
Cagey said:Also, the old trick of sighting down the neck to decide whether it's bowed, relieved or twisted is NFG.
Cederick said:Hmmm, but I ordered a Modern Vintage neck, not Warmoth Pro?? :sad:
Cederick said:Yeah I know some relief but I talk about sso straight you barely can see it with your eyes
Ace Flibble said:Urgh, so much misinformation.
The difference between the double 'pro' design and the regular one is huge. You can set the Pro necks up once, come back to them four years later and they won't have shifted. I've done literally that. A regular neck is going to shift to some degree just from handling it.
Take it from me, as someone who's had the 'joy' of trying to repair many a warped neck, get some strings on the guitar before you try to set the relief.
mystique1 said:I have a Warmoth Vintage modern strat neck, and my problem is that with 10-46 strings, the guage I favour, this is achieved with the trussrod almost loose in the neck. As soon as I adjust it and it begins to bite the relief is too great. I have a Fender neck on my Warmoth body at present that doesn't present this problem. Anyone know a fix to this?
mystique1 said:Yes a concave "bow", of 0.08-0.15" is what I'm talking about. In general guitar speak I always thought convex was a "hump". :icon_smile: My Vintage Modern has relief of 0.010" at the 8th fret, Fenders recommendation, with the truss rod loose in the neck which doesn't make for good tuning as the truss rod is doing nothing. When I adjust the trussrod so it begins to bite, the concave bow, or relief is too great. See my diagram.
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I've had the neck for quite a few months now, and have decided it's all but useless.
In all my years and of all the many, many techs and luthiers I've conversed with, I've never heard anybody else use the terms this way around. "Relief" is the correct amount of bowing. "Bow" is excessively concave. A convex curve has been, in my experience, referred to primarily as a "humped" neck.Cagey said:Other than that, convex is "bow", and concave is "relief". I know - not good terms - but whaddaya gonna do?
Ace Flibble said:In all my years and of all the many, many techs and luthiers I've conversed with, I've never heard anybody else use the terms this way around. "Relief" is the correct amount of bowing. "Bow" is excessively concave. A convex curve has been, in my experience, referred to primarily as a "humped" neck.Cagey said:Other than that, convex is "bow", and concave is "relief". I know - not good terms - but whaddaya gonna do?
Street Avenger said:I really have no use for the side-adjust.
Cagey said:Street Avenger said:I really have no use for the side-adjust.
I doubt many people do. The dual-acting truss rod makes for a surprisingly stable neck, so the need to adjust is all but gone. Access convenience means nothing if you don't need access.