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Prove it before you glue it! prove it’ll play in tune before you glue it on |
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After installing a new bridge plate in this beat-up Gibson J-50 from the early 1950s, I needed to make a bridge for it. That’ll take up most of the afternoon... y, wait! Months ago I made a bridge for a similar Gibson, but it turned out to be too thin for that guitar. Maybe it'll work on this one I’m glad I saved it! |
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I clamped the bridge in place using two soundhole clamps and drilled the bridge pin holes through the new bridge plate. The clamps also held a bridge plate caul on the inside for the drill bit to exit into. This eliminates chipping of the new bridge plate. (I’m holding a similar caul in the photo.) |
Soundhole Clamps |
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| A temporary setup to test the action The first thing I want to know is whether the thickness of this bridge is okay for this guitar. Will I be able to get the string height I want for good action? To find out, I’ll roughly set up the saddle and nut and measure the action at the 12th fret. ![]() I made a fairly tall saddle (I can lower it later), fastened bridge bolts in the two E-string holes to help hold the bridge, and installed the two E-strings. Then I roughed in a white bone nut, and laid out the string spacing. |
Acoustic Bridge Bolts White Bone Nuts |
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![]() Dan is double-checking the calculations for locating the saddle. But how do you do that math in the first place? That’s easy: use the free Fret Calculator at stewmac.com. It’s one of the many Free Info items we put online to help you with your instrument work. |
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The roughed-in nut is taller than it will be when it's final-shaped, which will make the string action too high. So I’m using a capo to lower the strings over the first fret to approximate my final action. They’re not clamped down onto the fret, just lowered to hover above it at a good playing height. |
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I measured the string height with an action gauge (you might measure at a different fret, and that’s fine too). The action and the saddle height are okay, so the thickness of this bridge is okay for this guitar. Now let’s see if the saddle location is going to play in tune. |
String Action Gauge |
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To string it up will require bridge pins, so I lightly reamed the pin holes with a 5° pin hole reamer to fit some temporary pins. Later, after final-shaping the bridge and gluing it on I’ll complete the reaming and fit a set of bone bridge pins. |
Bridge Pin Hole Reamer |
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With all the strings on, it’s time to lower the strings at the nut. A too-tall nut makes accurate intonation impossible. |
Gauged Nut Slotting Files |
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It’s strung to pitch, and my tuner says the guitar plays in tune! Hooray! |
Peterson VS-F StroboFlip |
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It’s in tunethis scrapped bridge fits! Now I won’t spend the rest of the day making a new bridge. Even if I had to make a new bridge, I’d still do all these double-checking steps before gluing it anyhow.![]() |
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| Problem-solving products for this kind of work: | |||||||||||||||
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| Peterson VS-F StroboFlip The world's most versatile electronic tuner. |
Sloane Bridge Clamp Sturdy aluminum clamp for gluing a bridge or brace through the soundhole. |
Soundhole Clamps Ideal for clamping bridges and braces through a soundhole, these clamps reach where others can't. |
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| Gauged Nut Slotting Files We offer a total of 16 gauged nut files for guitar, banjo, mandolin, bass, violin and more. |
Acoustic Bridge Bolts Incredibly useful, these custom bolts are handy for temporarily mounting a bridge before it's glued onto the guitar. |
String Action Gauge Now in metric, too! The gauge used by the pros! Fast, accurate measurements for stringed instrument setups. |
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