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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

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  • I think we’re arguing semantics here. You are absolutely correct, there is no such thing as perfect intonation on an even temperament guitar (check out true temperament necks theyre trip).

    However I will outright disagree with you that the lightning bolt is “just as good” as an adjustable bridge. It is certainly possible to have one with perfect intonation at the 12th fret across all six strings but it is absolutely not the norm. So you have to compromise and split the difference on a few strings.

    Frankly, I like the looks of a lightning bolt wrap around over an adjustable one all day. But an adjustable saddle bridge is going to outperform it in achieving best possible intonation every time.


  • Beautifully put. Toss a GFS humbucker in there with a coil split on a push pull pot and some of their Wilkinson tuners. Parts done!

    Just to echo what you said, I wouldn’t even bother adding a pickup. You’d have to route a cavity for the pickup and the switch, Make a back plate, And then connect the cavities. Way too much work for very little payoff! And this is assuming he has the skill set to do it without borking it. High risk low reward



  • Based on the inlay and the sides of the fretboard I’m assuming you’re referring to the finish. Unlike rosewood (or similar) boards, most maple boards have a thin finish that absolutely wears through over time. Generally the only way to fix this is to refinish the neck and, due to the nature of a finished fretboard, usually this entails a re-fret.

    To my knowledge, the only way to prevent this from happening is to not play it. It’s just a natural by-product of playing a finished board.

    In the long term, More of the finish will wear off. Eventually you’ll even get some dark spots. It’s a look.

    Overall this is nothing I would be concerned about and certainly not justification for a refin. However, if you’re the type of person that absolutely can’t stand The look of an instrument that shows play wear (I understand), then I would strongly suggest you consider avoiding maple fretboards in the future as you’re going to be constantly fighting this battle assuming you actually play it.