If you try this on your screw-neck guitar, check both E strings at the neck heel when you're done to make sure they are equidistant from the edges of the fretboard. Loosening the neck like this can allow the neck to scoot a little out of alignment and one oof the E strings may slip off the ends of the frets up the neck if it's too close to the edge. They are indeed screws...not bolts.
@Rockbeareguitars9 ай бұрын
Very good point and great build, thank you 👍
@XChristianNoirX8 ай бұрын
@@RockbeareguitarsThis is super important. Several years ago, I did this trick on a guitar and my high E ended up too close to the edge. I thought it was a manufacturing flaw. I did it as soon as the guitar came in without playing it much, so I didn't realize it was from doing this trick. I even bought a new, very expensive bridge to make my strings closer together. Then I did it to another guitar and the same thing happened which is when I realized what had happened... But I had already spent $400 on the bridge for the other guitar.
@thebobandramonshow8 ай бұрын
@@XChristianNoirX Thanks for this. I replied to another similar comment a few days ago. It’s in the thread. This has it happened to me on Al the guitars I’ve done so far but I do a have a couple whose necks sideways angle can move slightly if I’m not careful and keep them tight.
@ericwright66728 ай бұрын
I have several guitars that I put inserts in the neck so they would sound better , & they do!
@davegilmer_Storyville4Life8 ай бұрын
@@ericwright6672me too, working out great.
@MISSREEB8 ай бұрын
Great tip, I have a couple of inexpensive bolt on guitars …..and tried this tip ..and it definitely worked wonders..even heard the crunch!!! Thank you.
@sole__doubt8 ай бұрын
Its wild how 35 years ago I was embarrassed that I had a Squier Strat and not an actual Fender. I would always call it a Fender and never refer to it as a Squier for that reason but now a days its actually cool to have a Squier. I wish I still had it.
@iLL_Corvo8 ай бұрын
I'll take the Pepsi taste test with squier standard strats and teles any day of the week
@tomashguitar6388 ай бұрын
Mid 80s MIJ Squiers were made by Fujigen plant, some of the best vintage-spec strats ever made. Highly collectable, nothing to shame about, miles apart from today’s Squier. Remember, they were made during US Fender shutdown.
@gilwood75304 ай бұрын
I have an old squier with the big head stock that I picked up about 6 years ago for 40$ ...One of the best players I have
@kevindietz64708 ай бұрын
This makes so much sense, great tip. Just tried it on my MIM Strat & J Bass, worked as described.
@mal2ksc8 ай бұрын
I've been doing this accidentally, just as a side effect of how I would square up the neck with the strings on. Now I know to do it on purpose! 😁
@5Bird58 ай бұрын
Great tip that all guitarists should know - thanjs for sharing. Yes, it makes a big difference, particularly on basses in my experience. I think also, it's good to mention the neck screw holes in the body. On just about every cheaper guitar, the neck screws actually thread into the body as well as the neck. I think it's because of a production shortcut where the neck is clamped in the neck pocket and the screw holes are drilled in one go. Quicker and in line. However, to get good clamping pressure, there must be clearance in the body holes for the screw to move freely through, so on any setup I check a re-drill as necessary. Having those few microns of clearance also benefit this 'knuckle cracking' procedure, as well as allowing some adjustment to correct kneck misalignment.
@beatbaker742020 күн бұрын
very true
@iansmith59739 ай бұрын
I’ve done this for years. Dan Erlewine gave this tip in one of his books. It closes the gap in the neck pocket and improves the contact between the neck and body to improve sustain.
@125grizzle9 ай бұрын
Was skeptical at first. Tried it and now I’m a believer. Thanks for passing this along! Cheers
@Haskaza229 ай бұрын
Great tip that I learned years ago!! I'd like to add that when doing this I have found that once you have loosened the screws to lightly tap the guitar on the floor at the bottom strap button while only holding the body ( not the neck) vertically. Once or twice should do it. I've found it seats the neck in the pocket a little better than just using the string tension to do it. Has worked for me for years.
@annunacky44639 ай бұрын
I just let the strings pull the neck into the pocket, but this sounds even better. I’m gonna do my Telly asap.
@danielstoddart9 ай бұрын
That does work, I've found. The only thing I'd caution against is to not tap the strap button because that can crack the finish around the button or mess up the strap button screw. You can get the same result by getting two 2x4 wood blocks or maybe saw horses and pushing them together on the floor, leaving enough space for the strap button in the middle so it doesn't hit the floor, and tap both sides of the bottom of the body simultaneously, which will achieve the same thing but without damaging the guitar.
@thebobandramonshow9 ай бұрын
Nice, thanks guys 👍
@DenariusHaveNarius8 ай бұрын
Books if they still existed.
@Faifstarr8 ай бұрын
So basically its the same principle as you would seat an axe head. Quite ingenious.
@bwilson_guitarworks8 ай бұрын
I used to do this, and actually forgot about it for awhile. Thanks for bringing it back to my attention!
@brendan9579 ай бұрын
I learned something today. Thanks! If someone happens to have a stripped wood screw, simply remove the screw and dip a toothpick in some wood glue (Elmers glue works too) and insert it in the hole and trim flush. Reinsert and tighten the screw. That should do ‘er . Toothpicks are likely softwood, so alternatively , you could take a sharp knife, cut a hardwood shaving and do the same thing. Theoretically, you wouldn’t even need the glue, the taper of the screw should compress it in there just fine. The glue would just give you a little more permanence.
@bluglass78199 ай бұрын
Don’t actually even need the glue.
@DrAdams-fx6gy8 ай бұрын
You can pack saw dust into the whole then use superglue But even a better solution is to put sand, yes sand into the whole pack it down with pressure of a wooden match stick end put superglue. The sand soaks it up making the area very firm. Measure the screw thread and chose a smaller sized drill bit with a brad tip. Put tape around drill bit tip a little shy of the total length of the screw. Drill hole to tape and reinstall the screw. Only do this for a neck with a major loose screw hole. I've custom built and repaired guitars for years and have done this on many guitars. If it's a more expensive guitar and holes are lose I drill a larger hole and ute a dowel rod in. Buy I use a dremel to cut a thin line going up each side of the dowel, this allows for excess titebond wood glue to come out if it needs to. Re-screw doing the same measurements as I said above. More work but better than using toothpicks. And if there is a time to use toothpicks find bamboo. They sell them in the same area of toothpicks and home repair.
@terryd40255 ай бұрын
Was a bit sceptical...but tried it on my bolt on neck guitars, and I swear I can hear a difference on almost all if them - more zing and treble or something - very cool!
@123pap9 ай бұрын
I've doing this for years and believe me it makes a difference
@jovisha698 ай бұрын
Nice tip Bob. Thanks mate..I've learnt that from our great late friends Andy and Rupert long time ago ..works on Fender basses too
@charlie-obrien8 ай бұрын
I bulilt a Tele partscaster a few years ago and I believe I did this quite accidentally. After I first put it together I wasn't happy with the resonance, so I thought I would simply check the tightness of the screws, so I loosened them and retightened while it was strung up. Like I said, I was shooting in the dark but since then it is one of my most resonant guitars. A true joy to play.
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Sounds like you discovered this excellent tweak by fortunate accident. Probably worth repeating to see if it yields even further improvements!
@charlie-obrien8 ай бұрын
@@Rockbeareguitars I am going to try it on my other "bolt on" guitars. I hope I get similar results.
@Hordebarraged9 ай бұрын
Mind officially blown. I've been "playing" for 50 years and have never heard of or tried this. I've just massively improved 4 of my guitars including a severely poor neck-joined mid 70s Made in Japan Diamond brand junior double cut. Its worked amazingly well on all of them. Thanks for this info.
@zorzum8 ай бұрын
carrying out this operation on a full moon evening is even more profitable
@tooth2k9 ай бұрын
This is an amazing “hack”! I love it& I’ve taken it a tiny step further & NOT re-tightening the bolts, I just hear the “snick” sound when I relieve the pressure on the screws& stop there. Way less than a quarter turn of the Philips head. All my fenders, squires & danelectros feel like new, loose, funky chimey guitars now. Absolutely incredible & so simple! Thanks again!
@jltrem9 ай бұрын
Bob, saw this some years ago on a video from Guitar Guts, probably the same as you saw. I concur, it works. Another thing the anti-bolt neck people never acknowledge is with a bolt neck you can change the neck angle of your guitar with a screwdriver and shim material. And in a matter of minutes.
@silverjaw1389 ай бұрын
Bolt on is a superior design. Just is…. Come at me Gibson
@jltrem9 ай бұрын
@@silverjaw138 Agreed.
@MikeMike-kc9st8 ай бұрын
I have always been a Gibson guy but recently bought a Pro II Strat and quite like the micro tilt feature that allows me to adjust neck angle with the turn of a screw and no shims necessary. Also, my Taylor acoustic has a bolt on neck and I can’t believe how easy it was for me to do my own neck reset. So I guess I have to concede, as a Gibson enthusiast, I’m not prepared to come at anyone praising bolt on necks. They’re much easier to work with in every way. I’m looking forward to trying out this set-up tip on my Strat!
@maxs9728 ай бұрын
Great advice. I would add still to clean dust, filings, paint residue if you remove the neck to make a better resonant contact. If theres a shim, it's usually not a good one. Correct screwdriver helps not damaging the screws (phillips 2 usually).
@ared18t8 ай бұрын
It's over a hundred pounds of clamping force better than any clamp a luthier could hope to use for this application haha.
@indignow8 ай бұрын
nice trick, will give it a try on my squier tele custom II from 2010. An absolute budget but nice guitar
@carltone8 ай бұрын
I drilled out the holes on the neck made by the wood screws. Added brass threaded inserts ( Home Depot) . Why ? so I could replace the wood screws with machine screws. This enables me to remove and reattach the neck for my travel guitar without damaging the neck wood. It’s metal on metal. Works like a charm!
@kevinnsevinn7998 ай бұрын
What sizes did you use for brass inserts ?
@nuthinbutlove8 ай бұрын
I recently saw a video of a recording artist (I don't recall his name) who did the same with his Strat. He was constantly flying and nervous about his guitar if they made him gate check it. He decided to do that so he could remove the neck for the flight and carry it on the plane in a drafters tube and pack the body in his carry-on bag. Brilliant!
@carltone8 ай бұрын
@@kevinnsevinn799 the screw size is 10/24. Insert thread is the same of course. I drilled the neck holes to be slightly larger diameter than the narrowest part of the wood thread valley. So long ago I can’t recall the drill diameter sorry. I did lubricate the insert thread with soap. To ensure the the insert was square I ground the head off a bolt placed the threaded part into insert and locked it with a jam nut. Placed this assembly into the drill press chuck. I used the drill press as a press while turning the thread faster with a small wrench on the jam nut. Once the insert was well engaged I finished installation with a screwdriver blade that I had ground to snuggly fit the slot of the insert and it’s diameter . I didn’t want to crack the neck ( maple) or install it on an angle. There might even be a special insert tool designed specifically for the insert. I didn’t have one so this was my installation method.
@scottashe9848 ай бұрын
That makes sense. On all bolt on neck.
@annunacky44639 ай бұрын
I have a cheap MIM Telly that hung on the wall for a while. When I started back playing it, it sounded strange. So after another 6 months hanging I took it down, loosened the neck screws, and heard a loud click. Now it plays soooo much better and intonates perfectly. Same here, it went dead. I bought it due to the resonance it had in the shop.
@danielstoddart9 ай бұрын
Incidentally, this tip is one of the reasons why I don't hang my guitars. I know a lot of people do it, but what I've found is that if a 4-bolt guitar hangs long enough it can pull the heel of the neck away from the body. Just do the adjustment like he says here, and if you hear that click sound it's a good thing. Then tighten up the screws diagonally just like in the video, but store the guitar in a case, on a stand, or lying flat and you'll never have to do the adjustment again.
@paultraynorbsc6274 ай бұрын
cylinder head bolts sequence
@annunacky44634 ай бұрын
@@paultraynorbsc627 Yeah, they must have been a bit loose. On my Strat I took the wood screws out and sunk threaded channels in for fine thread bolts. Solid as a rock now. Lesson learned. Maybe some day do the Telly.
@elecengineer469 ай бұрын
I do this on all of my bolt on guitars. I would say about 75% of the time, it makes a difference. In general, if its out of tune when you tighten it back up that means that the neck was pulled into the pocket further. Also double check your intonation after you do this as this can shorten the nut to bridge length slightly.
@jimmooney52238 ай бұрын
"double check your intonation after you do this as this can shorten the nut to bridge length". This was truly my first thought when he loosened the neck screws under tension. Then I noticed your screen-name. Engineers know how stuff works!
@Five0Music4 ай бұрын
Brett Kingman pointed me your way! Great tip, and something I’ll definitely be trying on my inbound Strat when it arrives.
@spongiformАй бұрын
Wow I’ve been playing for 34 years and never heard this tip. Off to meddle with my strat right now. Thanks!
@beatbaker742020 күн бұрын
guitar resonates beautifully : ) worked on 2 guitars already, 1st one I hear little squeaks when loosening the screws a bit, 2nd guitar - the neck actually snapped into the pocket rapidly when I unscrew, like a fraction of a milimeter, but with a sound. then the guitar started to resonate and sound much better
@stevenpipes15559 ай бұрын
Yes. Ive done this to all of my bolt ons, as well as every bolt neck i work on. In all of my set ups Its a must! Ive actually tried it with tuners as well. Loosen the collar nut on the front of the tuner, and the location screw on the back. Then tighten them again. It helps seat any tuners that may have a loose fit.
@robrandall72445 ай бұрын
Thank-you. I've bought a few set-ups that should have included this. Excellent presentation style , cheers!
@progressiveissueswoodstock84878 ай бұрын
It works! Great tip. I've just done three inexpensive bolt ons and all were brought to life. Many thanks!!
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Glad it helped
@m.vonhollen66732 ай бұрын
This works! I slightly loosened the neck’s 4 bolts; and then I heard the sound of the neck moving into place. I readjusted the tuning and … good to go!
@tylerwillison49629 ай бұрын
Brilliant. I am grabbing my screwdriver and heading for the cases!
@jckelley108 ай бұрын
I heard about this tweak many years ago but I never tried it. Now I have a couple bolt on neck guitars that I didn't have then. I tried it and it works great! Much more acoustic output! Thank you!
@neilsmith94734 ай бұрын
I just performed this tweak on a self-build Telecaster which I got for £99 as a beater to save wear on my branded instruments. It already played very well indeed after I carried out a thorough setup, but this technique definitely improved the sustain. Great advice and when you actually think it through, it makes complete sense. Thank you for posting.
@Raggo123455 ай бұрын
Wow! Will test it on all my bolt-on guitars! What a great video! Subscribed!!!
@1man1guitarletsgo9 ай бұрын
I've done this with my guitars too, and agree, it's a good idea. An even better method is to fit threaded neck inserts, and use machine screws instead of woodscrews, because then the neck joint can be made even tighter. On a related note, the screwdriver in this video looks to me like a Posidriv 2, which is not a good fit in guitar neck screws. A Phillips 2 is a better fit. You should never use the wrong screwdriver type, or you _will_ damage the screws.
@one1gretsch8 ай бұрын
Yes, you are right. That was a bummer!😊
@martymiller95148 ай бұрын
Beautiful concept--it's always the simple things that have been in front of our eyes all this time. Thanks!
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@Joe-mz6dc9 ай бұрын
I had the opposite issue with my Squier Classic Vibe. I had owned it for some time and never noticed that it had been fastened far too loosely. It played okay, but once I tightened it the playability shot through the roof.
@michaeloconnor78499 ай бұрын
That is a true lightbulb moment. Thank you very much.
@Rockbeareguitars9 ай бұрын
You're very welcome. It was for me too, and for everybody I’ve passed it on to. And I must admit, I love the idea of an effective, zero-cost tweak 👍
@paul-573 ай бұрын
I've never heard of this before. Just did it on my Squire Strat then my Squire Tele worked well so I did my Fender Strat and worked a treat also. Great tip.
@marchallaert73728 ай бұрын
Works great. Just did it to one of my bolt ons and it helped the sustain. I just loosened each screw about 1/8 to 1/4. Heard the neck set popping as described. Tuned it back up did the procedure again. Tightened and tuned and it’s working great. Thank you for the set up advice.
@philipbrodermann68678 ай бұрын
Whenever I re-install a neck, I push the neck down (towards the bridge) with a fair amount of pressure and maintain it while I tighten up the screws (I also use the diagonal pattern) starting with the bottom or lower corner first. I think this has the same effect as what this video describes. Ensuring the heel is firmly and properly seated home in the pocket.
@cmatte828 ай бұрын
Yep. I saw this trick years ago. Works well. I also saw PRS mention using a wood block and lightly tapping the back of a tremolo bridge to seat it better. I don’t play trem guitars. So I’ve not done it. And I would def use a light tap. But it makes sense. Fwiw I also tend to take my bolt neck guitars apart and clean any excess paint out of the pocket. It’s amazing how much can be in there. I just use a single edge razor like a card scraper. And I don’t worry too much. Just the big stuff.
@DavidSmith-xz4zz9 ай бұрын
I always remove the rubber gasket thing from under the neck plate too if it has one.
@arnyarny779 ай бұрын
I intentionally put rubber gaskets under neck plate, did you notice a difference? I want to try this screw hack, but maybe I should remove gasket first?
@JohnOBryan2 ай бұрын
Just tried it on three of my strats, and it does make a difference.
@dredoesstuffdds50298 ай бұрын
Glad I came across this video. I have a lot of bolt on guitars and I absolutely love them. Can’t wait to try it out and see if it makes any of them better.
@WithCarePlz2 ай бұрын
Here’s the craziest and best tip for stripped out screw holes in wood. Take some course table salt and crush it up till it’s about halfway in size between where you started and normal finely ground table salt. Now using a folded up business card or piece of paper go ahead and fill the stripped screw hole with the crushed salt right up to the top of the hole. Put the screw back in. Presto! Works like a screw now. If it still won’t grab- add a bit more salt. It’s the craziest thing ever that it works so well. I’ve done it on everything from strat neck bolt-holes that were stripped, to strap buttons on hollow and semihollow guitars, to vintage. I’ve never had a single issue with doing this. Never seen a finish affected, never seen anything crack or break. It has never failed me. I had a friend who used to wonder why I would keep a salt shaker in my pedalboard bag. This is why. Anytime I have an issue or see somebody with a stripped screw-hole in wood I’ll show them this trick, and their eyes get huge and they look live they’ve learned the meaning of life lol. It’s a pretty cool trick that has never failed me once. It seems to last forever too. I’ve never had an issue with humidity messing it up, never seen anything leak out, never seen finish get damaged. It’s the craziest easy most useful tip I know for guitar repair lol. The other best tip is for people with F-hole guitars that have scratchy pots. It’s a giant PITA to try and fish wiring harnesses in and out of F holes just to spray Deoxit into the pots. But the shockingly simple tip is: you don’t have to take the pots out at all. Just take the knob off- thus revealing the pots shaft. You can take the can of Deoxit, and find a couple inch long piece of flexible plastic tubing that’s the right size to fit snugly over the pots shaft. Take the straw off your can of Deoxit and wrap one end several times with a rubber band till there’s a little wad of rubber at one end of the straw that fits snugly and seals decently into the piece of plastic tubing, and stuff it in. Then wrap it in a thin strip of duct tape just to insure that it seals and stays on. Now you’ve got your thin red straw from the deoxit with one end mated to the plastic tubing. Put the straw back on the can of deoxit. Put an old tshirt or rag down to protect the finish- seal the tubing down onto the shaft of the pot and hold it tightly while giving it a little tap of the spray, and if you did it right it will actually pressurize and you’ll see the liquid in the tubing have bubbles coming up thru it. That’s the air from inside the pot. Now twist the pot shaft back and forth thru it’s full sweep several times while making sure not to let the pressure leak out. It works like a charm- no need to even remove the pots. I figured this out one day with my 1966 Coronado II because the original pots were crackly and the signal would cut in and out. This fixed it perfectly, no fishing thru the F-hole required. Most pots have either a little hole at the base of the shaft or a split shaft. This works either way. Crazy…
@RiffChord8 ай бұрын
Learned and been using this for years. I think I learned it from Skynyrds guitar tech you can also put pressure on the neck to keep the high e string from falling off.
@tangobayus9 ай бұрын
Filing the tip off cross-point screwdrivers can make them fit better. If it doesn't work it might be because the pocket is too deep. In those cases a shim between the end of the neck and the body might help, but at the risk of changing the intonation.
@CharleyHolland8 ай бұрын
It’s 10.30pm. It’s a school night. But I just had to get up out of bed and go try this on my Tele.
@joergl5629 ай бұрын
Great hint! It works on basses too...🤓👍 Dirty trick to fix worn out screw holes: Thin bamboo tooth picks...short pieces of them "filled in" the holes"! No glue or something lihe that. No joke, works fine not only for the neck screws!👋
@Rockbeareguitars9 ай бұрын
Yes!
@DavidKennaway18 ай бұрын
Just done this on my Burns. Brilliant sustain. Thanks. I have 30 guitars many with bolt on. I will be doing them all. Just stopped writing this and did my fender telecaster. Big difference again in sustain. Top tip.
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Wow, fantastic, so glad it works for you 👍
@keokiheller43518 ай бұрын
Simply BRILLIANT😎
@dennisoverbey82462 ай бұрын
If you strip the holes you can take the neck off then take a wooden toothpick and some wood glue and push the toothpicks with some glue on them till you fill the hole up and cut off the extra length off wait for the glue to dry. Then the screws will hold tight again.
@beakerstreet10909 ай бұрын
Surprise! Surprise! Suprise!.....Watched your video, and it made sense. So, I was expecting a really minor improvement. Can't believe how big of a difference it made! Brightened it up, and much better resonance! Thanks!
@jkydiego29 күн бұрын
I was always wondering no matter how i setup my strat, it always feels different from some good one in guitar shop. The secret is here. It really makes the guitar sound and feel better alot.
@tonyturner36098 ай бұрын
This made a huge difference in the tone of my guitar! Thanks for the tip. I am glad i ran across this video. My guitar sounds so much better after doing this.
@EmynBlade-y7l8 ай бұрын
Such a handy tip Unreal how much difference it made on some of my guitars Thanks so much
@kenster35549 ай бұрын
I was likewise skeptical, but agreed that if I was uber careful, I probably wouldn’t cause any harm. What I discovered was that the four screws on my ‘83 American strat were actually already really loose! 😬 Sooo glad that I discovered this and tightened everything up.
@Rockbeareguitars9 ай бұрын
Even better (or worse depending on perspective). Glad it worked for you!
@thomasstonehewer70379 ай бұрын
Tried this on my 4 Strats... saw the biggest difference on my 1957 Mary Kaye followed by my 66. On the two 78 Harayama Japanese strat copies the difference was less pronounced... will try it on the vintage Offsets 🤔
@ncc74656m9 ай бұрын
Ooohhh, a Mary Kaye! I'm so jealous - I want a Tele in Mary Kaye spec, my dream rig.
@danielpark40288 ай бұрын
I’m so trying this…😮
@joeruffini11779 ай бұрын
Pleasure listening to what you have said, I kind of did this too , but not in such an organized fashion, thanks for the structured advice!
@Sammywhat8 ай бұрын
Great trick!! I've seen this before and can't remember who it was that shared this. So now, when I tell folks about this, you are getting the credit! Thanks for the share!! 😎👍
@jimmywrangles9 ай бұрын
Just did it to my Strat, took 3 minutes maximum. It lacked sustain so I'll check it tomorrow when it's not late at night and hopefully it'll improve things a little. Thanks for the upload, much appreciated.
@theiguana20778 ай бұрын
I might have watched the same video you did! I forgot all about this trick until I watched your video. Thanks for the reminder, my Strat sounds great.
@DonBeckett8 ай бұрын
Congratulations 🎉 you've got yourself a real winner here. Thanks for sharing. Tried it immediately. Impressive.
@GaryKoser8 ай бұрын
Tried this on my new Sire S3 . Heard some movement and re tightened screws . Had to adjust intonation. Made a big difference. Thanks for the tip!
@ClearVisProductions9 ай бұрын
Be sure to check your intonation after doing this. If this procedure is successful it should there should be a slight difference in the intonation before versus after.
@markclearwater65928 ай бұрын
Wonder why no one else mentioned this, thanks!
@forestyogin22189 ай бұрын
Yes, I did this around 2014 when I saw a KZbin video on it. My Tele resonated noticeably more (10-20%) after the trick. It works. And the more a guitar resonates like an acoustic, the better is sounds through pedals and a tube amp.
@claudevieaul14658 ай бұрын
Great tip! I'll certainly give it a go on my bolt-ons, but how you explain it actually makes a lot of sense... 😎👍🙏
@stevejohnson52519 ай бұрын
I saw that original video. Did it to my Wayne Charvel (W.C.) custom Tele, think les paul w/ dual humbuckers. It makes a difference.
@KozmykJ9 ай бұрын
Yup. I've been doing this for a long time. I first came across the improvement while loosening the screws to better align the neck with the bridge. The little 'crack' noise as it it shifted told me that there had been some 'free play' to be taking up. A little revisit to the intonation adjustment had the guitar ringing like it should.
@HalfGonzo8 ай бұрын
Makes perfect sense! I am headed over to the studio to tweak a soulless Strat that has set in its case since I purchased it. You rock!
@PhreddCrintt9 ай бұрын
I've done this on all mine for years and it works like a dream. Highly recommended.
@jfturner675 ай бұрын
Never knew it, gonna do it! Thanks!
@Fixtor8 ай бұрын
I didn't record a before and after, so it's a bit hard to judge from the memory, but I feel like this trick made my quitar a bit louder and "fuller" when played unplugged. Did not check yet how it is plugged in but I'm pretty sure that there's going to be a real difference. Thanks for sharing this trick!
@mikedwiles9 ай бұрын
Excellent video! Had a guitar that would not properly intonate. It was because the neck was not seated properly into the pocket. Did this little trick and boom! It just needed a little movement into the body and this was the issue. Cheers!
@Rockbeareguitars9 ай бұрын
Wow, great story 👍
@das2502508 ай бұрын
A couple of notes. A. You may tighten the strings above tune especially prior to swapping strings , which will pull in the neck very firmly . B. The intonation may be very slightly out of wack after it ,so that may need a slight fine tune .
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Nice adds, thanks
@kaneo678 ай бұрын
It works! just did this on my Cimar strat which i thought was perfect but as I was watching your video I realised my Silver Sky SE has a bigger acoustic sound and the whole guitar vibrates-they all do-so PRS obviously already know this trick. Now my cimar does it as well. Sounds great!
@FlangerNotAnger8 ай бұрын
I've heard of this! Beautiful! I've got a $300 new/used squire to try this on! Thank you so much!
@gregoryhaywood32649 ай бұрын
Plus 1 for this, thanks for the video! I started doing it in about 2014, made that noticeable difference to tone quality and (not often mentioned) the vibration of notes thru to the body. The practice is yet to damage / crack a neck joint (ie where the body made of budget timber and / or with a thin section between the neck and the neck pickup rout) so I can reasonably safely recommend the mod. The only different thing I do is perform the mod with the instrument tuned up to D rather than E. (Just for safety especially with soft timber guitars). Then proceed to tune up higher and check harmonics intonation (important to have accurate).
@50gary8 ай бұрын
What everyone calls 'bolt-on" neck is a misnomer, if fact they are screw on necks. As stated (and commonly known) they use wood screws to fasten the body and neck. I use machine type threaded bolts, small dia. I install machine screws by imbedding metal inserts (permanently) in the neck. I use a Bridgeport vertical mill for this procedure to assure a precise installation. The bolts are the same length and diameter is a slight few thousandths of and inch larger than the wood screws. Bolts are flat head (not oval head) countersunk, and are Alan head drive and not phillips (which are fairly easy to strip and look ugly). Allen heads you can apply more torque and the machine screw threads do not wear out the wood each time you remove your neck because they screw into the metal inserts, and they look better. I feel this is a far better, more solid true bolt up neck joint, certainly more durable and precise. I wonder why Fender Custom shop doesn't offer this? Likely then they would eventually have to include it on production level guitars?
@jonnramos12474 ай бұрын
chiropractic neck technique, if you like to bend a lot that's the right setup for but if you strum or finger picking it sounds dull.
@chrisblue15154 ай бұрын
That is a great hack! Thanks for the video.
@Wolf_K3 ай бұрын
It works, 100%. Been doing it for years.
@BorisBidjanSaberi118 ай бұрын
Trying this for a squier and a sterling…
@thegreatgarrett19 ай бұрын
Great tip. Learned this a few years ago. Sounded like just another guitar myth, but I tried it. Each of my bolt on necks made an audible 'pop' when i loosened the screws, which was the neck popping into hard contact with the body due to the tension of the strings. The guitars all needed to be retuned, too, indicating that the neck did in fact move.
@danielstoddart9 ай бұрын
Yes, the guitar being out of tune after the adjustment is a good sign, not a bad one. It means the adjustment worked. All you have to do at that point is make sure the neck is aligned and then re-tighten the screws properly.
@danrunnoft66429 ай бұрын
This should also increase tuning stability. Great idea, thanks for sharing.
@MichaelWatts8 ай бұрын
Well I’ll be damned! Tried that just now on my old tele - heard the little crunch - tightened it up again and wow! Thanks Bob!
@Lloyd-mo8 ай бұрын
I'll try this today on my squire tele. thanks for the tip
@jeffro.8 ай бұрын
Great idea! I'll try it on every guitar i see. In fact, ima start carrying a Phillips screwdriver with me whenever i go to the guitar store! That way, whenever i "test play" a guitar, I'll be sure that the neck pocket is well seated. An every time i go to a friend's house, I'll make sure all their guitars have seated necks. I'm gonna be a MONSTER!!! YAHAHAHA! 🤪 lol.
@BinaryDad9 ай бұрын
That all makes sense. How satisfying. Subscribed.
@gryzew9 ай бұрын
I knew this method before also from youtube. One caveat I think I discovered -- Fender-type guitar are prone to finish cracks in the corner of neck pockets. I think I once introduced such a crack where it wasn't before by doing this, the sudden small "jump" in a tight neck pocket might have been responsible. I would've now tried doing it by loosening the strings, loosening the neck screws a bit, then tuning the guitar to pitch, then tightening the neck screws. Or tried doing this with the guitar downtuned a step or two. Just so the neck isn't shifted so suddenly or with such a force.
@gryzew9 ай бұрын
Or it might've been caused by the loosened neck being pulled more to the side where the crack appeared. It's very normal to see these tiny cracks in neck pocket corners on Fenders and there's a solid chance it might've (or would've in the future) appeared unrelated to doing this.
@GurungyNoHamuster8 ай бұрын
If you're a woodworker you might have a long clamp (to clamp end-to-end) and a shorter clamp (neck-to-body). I prefer this way. Then you have great pocket contact both ways. It also prevents the neck from riding up as you tighten the screws. You choose.
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Fantastic if you have the kit!
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
Fantastic if you have the kit!
@garygratzer96708 ай бұрын
Great tip BUT before re tightening the screws check you neck horizontal alignment viewing the high and low e strings in proportion to their spacing from the fret ends. Many neck pockets have enough play to mis align the string centering. The D and G strings relation too the fret markers can help.
@mikeshanermusic8 ай бұрын
Just did it and it works. I even heard the crunch you mentioned. Right on!! Thank you dude!!
@ToddTheJoker9 ай бұрын
Good tip Bob! I am going to try this on MY Squier Cabronita Telecaster(although mine is a thinline) and then on my other bolt on Fenders! thank you
@HeatEngine9 ай бұрын
Totally concur. It works! Only one possible issue remaining. On Mexican Strats and possibly Squires, too, there may be an inspection sticker on the heel of the neck that will dampen those vibrations. I suspect Fender does this intentionally, as I've never found those stickers on Corona factory Strats. So totally remove the neck to check the neck heal and remove the "sabotage" sticker if you find one! Then string it back up and do this neck pocket tweak, and you'll definitely hear the increased resonance and feel an increase in the vibration at the tip of the headstock when you strum the strings.
@Rockbeareguitars9 ай бұрын
Wow, didn’t know that but I bet you’re right. And never shim a neck with paper. But I’ve found the plastic collar stiffeners from work shirts come in a variety of thicknesses and work really well.
@atavismdream8 ай бұрын
Do a before and after comparison video on a new guitar. Unplugged and plugged in
@Rockbeareguitars8 ай бұрын
I would but I don’t have any plans to purchase any new guitars. Just an early fifties blackguard Telecaster - if I can find one I can afford - and that will be as far from new as you can get!