dbw said:The British use American dollars as napkins, toilet paper, and kindling.![]()
tfarny said:BUT it looks exactly like what I would buy. No reason it should cost much more than a normal nut though. Does a custom nut cost as much as a mexi strat in the UK?
GoDrex said:misplacedsanity said:Funky nut anyone........
http://www.guitarsetup.co.uk/TheFunkyNut.php
Sorry, not flying to the UK to pay 160 pounds ($320) for that...
arkivel said:DiMitriR33 said:there is no such thing a perfect temperment. the western scale is a mathematical accident, a guitar is an even tempered instrument although intonation is never perfect an ideal guitar never has a perfect harmony. there are many ways to tune a piano and most are called well tempered, they have better harmonies but only in some keys, there is always a wolf key or wolf tones in each key, any attempt to something better will put a deficiency somewhere else, and a guitar is a particular challenge do to the many different chord shapes. if you stick to one chord shape the open strings can be tune to pure intervals and you can move that shape up or down. good theory for slide players but most people wont stick to one shape.
other alternative is to have each note and there for each fret at each string intonated to the notes of a well tempered piano and have a particular set of wolf notes that you live with. or you can go fretless and like a violin you can tune open strings to pure harmonies and can use any chord form as long as your fingers hit the notes correctly and you have perfect pitch.
or you can stop worrying about intonation, get it close and play your instrument!
This is an issue of intonation not temperament. Western music and the guitar is based on an equal temperament scale for obvious reasons. The problem is that individual mass and string tension affect intonation and therefore the ability of a guitar to actually achieve equal temperament in the first place.
The "true tempered" guitar that was linked does not actually employ a true temperament scale. It's really an equal temperament scale, like any regular guitar, except it is more accurately intonated. The Earvana nut achieves exactly the same thing as this fancy neck, the only difference is that it's slightly less accurate. 3 notes on an Earvana fretboard are 1 or 2 cents off from a TT neck. Considering the massive difference in price, I'm not sure it's worth the fuss.
What is worth the fuss IMO is finding a compensated nut that is made of a decent material.
DiMitriR33 said:ok maybe i went off on another tangent, point was perfect intonation is still a compromise, well temper is a compromise, even temper is a compromise, compromises make the music more interesting, you can live with it, or you can obsess over how to make the best compromise.
GoDrex said:I think the OEM strat ones might be like graphtech, but my cream colored two piece one was definitely not like a graphtech nut. Grpahtech nuts don't come in cream (I don't think). I have a black two piece one that I ordered for my LP (that I'm not going to use) and it MIGHT be the graphtech material.
I got the one for my strat directly from Earvana - the one for the LP was from warmoth. When I replaced the Earvana with a Graphtech on my strat the difference was huge. It's far better sounding and playing (stays in tune better).
arkivel said:GoDrex said:I think the OEM strat ones might be like graphtech, but my cream colored two piece one was definitely not like a graphtech nut. Grpahtech nuts don't come in cream (I don't think). I have a black two piece one that I ordered for my LP (that I'm not going to use) and it MIGHT be the graphtech material.
I got the one for my strat directly from Earvana - the one for the LP was from warmoth. When I replaced the Earvana with a Graphtech on my strat the difference was huge. It's far better sounding and playing (stays in tune better).
Graphtech makes nuts with two different materials. The black one is called a "Tremnut" and is made with a Teflon material. The white one is made from a material they call "Tusq". I assume "Tusq" is what Earvana was referring to.
Just to be clear, do I assume correctly that you had a two piece white nut on your strat?
I told them to move to UK, Pounds is way more stronger than dollars :evil4:Funky Phil said:In defense of the price (£100)...
1 £100 is a typical BFTS installation price in the UK.