Well okay I admit I'm a truss rod noob here and I have 2 guitars with the same syndrome and am wondering if indeed I need to adjust the truss rods.
Both guitars in question had really low action and were fretting out around the 15th fret and higher. I raised the action to compensate for this but now the action isnt too desireable at all. It is fine actionwise up at the locking nut end but gradually gets higher as it moves up to the higher frets.
So would tightening or loosing the truss rod compensate for this ? Or would even putting in a shim/shims under the locking nut ( which I have on my BC Rich's) also give me the required effect of balancing things out.
I'm assuming that loosening the truss rod it will slightly bow the neck up and help to remedy this situation and then I can low the action again to get rid of the deadspots. Or am I totally off in my thinking?
Both guitars in question had really low action and were fretting out around the 15th fret and higher. I raised the action to compensate for this but now the action isnt too desireable at all. It is fine actionwise up at the locking nut end but gradually gets higher as it moves up to the higher frets.
So would tightening or loosing the truss rod compensate for this ? Or would even putting in a shim/shims under the locking nut ( which I have on my BC Rich's) also give me the required effect of balancing things out.
I'm assuming that loosening the truss rod it will slightly bow the neck up and help to remedy this situation and then I can low the action again to get rid of the deadspots. Or am I totally off in my thinking?
Comment