hey i was looking at my new jackson ke1f and i was going to adjust the truss rod because the neck had a overbow or whatever its called but i put the wrench in and started to turn it to the left and its really stiff like i barely moved it a half of a quarter turn and it was making this tinking noise the whole time how hard is it to break a truss rod and what would you guys suggest i do:think:
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If that's a 2-way truss rod it might be "loosened" a whole bunch (add relief). Those will have a "loose" spot in the center of the range of adjustment, and will get tight again when you go "left" or "looser".
So, the neck is back-bowed? No relief, or negative relief? Maybe someone just jacked the truss rod up as tight as they could to get the action low (n00b mistake.)
I don't know what to tell you without seeing it myself. If it seems to be get a little easier to turn as you go left, keep going left. If it is all the way left and it is still back-bowed, you're in deep shit anyway.
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I'm with Jazzy. You need to tell us better what's wrong. Please explain what you mean by "overbow". When I hear that, it make me think of forward bow, or too much relief, in which case loosening is the wrong thing to do. If you've got backbow, loosening would make sense. We can't help unless we know which it is. What are the symptoms? If you fret a string at the first & 17th and look closely from the side, is the string sitting high off the frets in the middle or is it hitting them?
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alright what i meant was that i can get the action low but not like really low so when it was low i had it in e standard but it was buzzing at the first fret on all the strings when i would hold it down but it wouldn't buzz when i strummed a open string or any other strings, i did the hold the last fret and first and look at the the 12th it was really close so i figure there was too much bow, when i say that i mean like a arch or a rainbow where there the truss has been tightened too much so i tried to turn it left but it was tight
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Originally posted by beefcake View Postalright what i meant was that i can get the action low but not like really low so when it was low i had it in e standard but it was buzzing at the first fret on all the strings when i would hold it down but it wouldn't buzz when i strummed a open string or any other strings, i did the hold the last fret and first and look at the the 12th it was really close so i figure there was too much bow, when i say that i mean like a arch or a rainbow where there the truss has been tightened too much so i tried to turn it left but it was tight
Don't adjust the trussrod alot for string height. Basic rule of thumb - make sure there's not a ton of relief (upbow), the nut height is good, and adjust the bridge height for height of the strings. Then you can get more precise and technical on the adjustments. Like add/remove some relief, saddle heights, maybe even fret level, etc..Every man dies... Not every man really lives!!
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Originally posted by warlok View PostReally close, as in it has some relief? Assuming you mean it's got some "upbow", bowed towards the front of the guitar, and you're buzzing at the first fret, you may need to shim the nut. Fret the 3rd fret and see if there's space between the top of the 1st fret and string.
He says he has no open-string buzz, but has buzz when he frets at the first fret, so that should rule out a low nut. Sounds like he either needs more relief or may have a high fret.
Does anybody know for sure what type of truss rod the newer USA Jacksons have? Like MAJNH said above, a single-acting is going to feel & act completely different than a double-acting rod. A single-acting rod will just get really loose, but with a double-acting rod there will be resistance when adding relief if it gets to the point where string tension isn't creating any upbow. This is one of those that's hard to know without having the guitar in hand.
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Originally posted by dg View PostHe says he has no open-string buzz, but has buzz when he frets at the first fret, so that should rule out a low nut.Every man dies... Not every man really lives!!
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