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| The tailpiece was tightened down snug to the top, to solidly couple the hardware to the body for good tone. But when the strings touch the back of the bridge, I believe you’re losing tone because you're dampening the strings. It just has to reduce the natural, chimey, harmonic presence that we love to hear.* I always set the tailpiece high enough for the strings to clear the bridge. |
*Leon Rhodes, of the Grand Ole Opry, feels that behind-the-bridge harmonics are important, too: he doesn't want them! |
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| At 5°, this one’s on the steep side. That’s why you can’t crank the tailpiece down low without the strings hitting the bridge. |
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I’ll set it up the way I think it should be, and let’s see if Frank’s customer gets happy. |
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![]() frets, it won’t keep those frets from springing back up. Our new deadblow hammer’s shot-filled head (you can hear the shot in there) strikes the fret with no bounce. The energy goes to the fret, seating it with fewer blows and less bounceback. |
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Stop Tailpiece Wrench |
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Under string tension, it’s hard to raise or lower a Tune-O-Matic bridge. Here I’m using a bridge jack to hoist the bridge up momentarily so I can turn the thumbwheels. I first saw this tool in the original Gibson shop in Kalamazoo, Michigan. They used it all the time, and it’s handy. |
Bridge Jack |
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| This bridge, a Nashville Tune-O-Matic, had caved in from years of tension. It no longer had the proper saddle radius. The top of the bridge body should be straight like the edge of gauge in this photo, but look at it sag. StewMac stocks replacement parts and saddles for a bridge like this, but I decided to start fresh with our Nashville T-O-M bridge (an exact replica). I saved the old bridge in the guitar case (not that it’s of much value). |
NashvilleTune-O-Matic |
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Using the string spacing rule as my guide, I laid the strings out on the saddles for proportional spacing the way I like it. |
String Spacing Rule |
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Both the notched and understring radius gauges agreed that the saddle radius matched the 12" fretboard radius perfectly. To put string notches in the saddles, I used a shortcut I learned by visiting the Gibson shop: |
Understring Radius Gauges |
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I simply tapped each string with the brass face of my fret hammer. The strings make their own notch. (Only do this with an old set of strings, since it ruins them! I’ll be putting new strings on.) |
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Quick Setup Tip This guitar didn’t have intonation problems, so I set the saddles in the new bridge to the same locations as the old bridge saddles. To do this, I quickly measured each saddle with a luthier's caliper and adjusted the new ones to match. |
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Lock down tight The customer wanted the tailpiece tight against the body, believing it gives him “good sustain” (like “good tone,” that’s a highly subjective term, IMO). But there’s a way to get this kind of lock-down even when the tailpiece is raised up: |
Luthier's Digital Caliper |
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And here's a simple way to raise those strings off the back of the bridge while keeping all original hardware:![]() |
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| Problem-solving products for this kind of work: | |||||||||||||||
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| Bridge Jack Adjust Tune-O-Matic bridges quickly with the same tool Gibson used in their original Kalamazoo factory. |
Nashville Tune-O-Matic Bridge Found on new Gibson solidbodies. Featuring unnotched saddles with individual saddle screw retainer clips. |
Gotoh 'Stop' Tailpiece The counterpart to the venerable Tune-O-Matic bridge. Stop tailpieces anchor the strings firmly and provide great tone and sustain. |
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| String Action Gauge NEW! Now in metric, too! The gauge used by the pros! Fast, accurate measurements for stringed instrument setups |
String Spacing Rule Accurate string spacing without calipers, calculators or shop rulers. |
Luthier's Digital Caliper Measures fret height before and after the fretwire has been installed. |
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