S
SalsaNChips
Guest
I have a question about the angle of the neck in relation to the body and how that is usually adjusted. Are necks only supposed to be bolted on the body at the angle determined by the cut of the heel on the neck? Because, on my Fender Strat neck at least, that was pretty much in line with the body. Meaning the string height off the body was WAY too low for my playing. I played my Strat for many years like this, always struggling with palm muting and constantly crowded by the position of the volume knob hitting my little finger UNTIL just recently when I took the neck off, shimmed it about 1/8th (using washers over the rear two bolt positions), reattached the neck then raised my bridge (Wilkinson tremelo) and saddles WAY up to set my string height relative to the new neck angle. The difference in the playability of the guitar was enormous. Palm muting is now effortless. My right hand now clears the volume knob and it in general just makes things a lot more comfortable. BUT, my sense is that doing that reduces the contact patch of the neck heel on the body and as such, can negatively affect tone (I haven't noticed any difference though). Asking because the custom Tele that I just ordered from Warmoth may require a similar treatment when I get into the final set up. I know Fender used to feature a neck angle adjustment on some Stratocasters, there was a allen screw in the body under the heel plate that you could turn to shim the back of neck heel up (after loosening the neck bolts). Just wondering why Warmoth doesn't make this available as an option on their bodies. Also, how common is this type of adjustment and is there any standard protocol for how it is supposed to be done (as opposed to using washers like I did)?