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New Guitar problem
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Ricardo
Posts: 14801
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC
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RE: New Guitar problem (in reply to lucaspada894)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: lucaspada894 I bought a J Marcario flamenco 75FN Negra model, and it has a spectacular sound...at the first frets. The higher up the neck I go, the more out of tune it is, it goes lower in tune the higher up the frets, I removed the shim the guitar came with and replaced the strings and it helped a bit, but the problem is still there, but now that I removed the shim, there is a really ugly buzz on the e string first fret, should I return this guitar? Hold the horses...first change the entire set of strings, perhaps even a different brand to be sure. It is rare that guitars are sent off with intonation THAT off. But strings can often be untrue, even new sets. And make sure that you are not, due to high action, pushing the string too hard down. Vibrato is a technique where you simply push or pull a string to change it's pitch, and is a technique to master like all the others so one is not out of tune, ESPECIALLY in the higher frets. It's why I recommend students to tune the guitar to open strings only and not fretted chords.
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Date Feb. 22 2014 6:58:06
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Ricardo
Posts: 14801
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC
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RE: New Guitar problem (in reply to Anders Eliasson)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Anders Eliasson If talking about "normal" fingerboards, I can accept if someone tells me that a higher setup needs more compensation than a lower one because pressing the strings further down means you actually pitch them a bit up, but a higher setup also means a very small amount of longer distance between the nut and the saddle and especially the 12th fret and the saddle, which ends up levelling out things more or less. Just like you, I compensate 1,5mm on a flamenco and the same on a classical with an identical fretboard I really don't understand this compensation thing at all. It seems totally arbitrary when you consider a technique as basic as vibrato. Players need to learn to play in tune, simple as that. Up high, down low, high action, low action, it all depends and makes huge difference before you go slapping your fingers on the fretboard, applying un even pressures with non machine like fingers. Then there is the fret height and finally string imperfections which is a huge factor. I can't see how a compensated bridge is doing a darn thing in the midst of all those playing variables. In that sense I am with mr. Reyes, but I guess I would really need to get a good sampling of guitars compensated and not, to focus a comparison. Ricardo
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CD's and transcriptions available here: www.ricardomarlow.com
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Date Feb. 24 2014 17:20:06
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estebanana
Posts: 9351
Joined: Oct. 16 2009
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RE: New Guitar problem (in reply to Ricardo)
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quote:
I really don't understand this compensation thing at all. It seems totally arbitrary when you consider a technique as basic as vibrato. Players need to learn to play in tune, simple as that. Up high, down low, high action, low action, it all depends and makes huge difference before you go slapping your fingers on the fretboard, applying un even pressures with non machine like fingers. Then there is the fret height and finally string imperfections which is a huge factor. I can't see how a compensated bridge is doing a darn thing in the midst of all those playing variables. In that sense I am with mr. Reyes, but I guess I would really need to get a good sampling of guitars compensated and not, to focus a comparison. If the string length was not compensated to fit the scale length you would hear it loud and clear as out of tune. It is a separate issue from player malfunction. You could not play in tune without a compensated scale. There a few things at play in compensation which makes it less a science and more a trial & error problem - The diameter of the core of each string vs. how flexible it makes the over wound string is one factor. The diameter of a non over wound string and it's flexibility is another. The other factor is that pressing the string down does shorten it a bit. So the two combined factors that shorten a stopped string are: pressing it down and stiffening at the stop point. Let's look at the part where the string stiffens at the stop point: A string like the nylon treble G tends to play sharp, the reason is that it is a fat string in relation to how flexible it is. When you press it to a fret and stop it, the string does not actually stop at that fret because it's thickness creates a small length of string after the fret that becomes stiffer due to contact with the fret. There is a very, very small length of string that becomes like a little pipe due to contact tension with the fret and to compensate for that after length that tightens up and becomes harder the string length needs to be lengthened. The little stiff pipe section of string shortens the string length. That is why G strings on Nylon string guitars often have longer compensation that the other strings. You can sometimes see wide saddles with a notch letting the G string ride farther back towards the tie block. All the strings do that physical hardening where they contact being stopped, and at the nut also, but the G string is biggest in diameter and sometimes requires a bit more compensation due to it's tendency to create a stiffer after length at the stop point. Ok, do you get what I mean? I wish I knew the actual terms in scientific language for that phenomenon of stiffening at the stop point, perhaps Richard Jernigan knows the words? If you got that far then there's more to compensation; and it is different in how one applies it for nylon strung guitars and steel strung guitars. The same principles apply, but because steel strings have different core to winding ratios than overwound nylon strings they flex at the stopping point in a way that nylon strings don't so they are compensated in a different order. In general on both nylon and steel strung guitars the thickest overwound basses get more compensation. Theoretically nylon strings should get more bass compensation, but they seem to play in tune if all strings are compensated equally, with the occasional G string that needs a bit more. Steel strings need more bass compensation for the E and A, but the D with its small core can ride more toward the nut. Look at the long slant of a steel string saddle and you will see more bass compensation. Ok so this is why, in some cases, changing the gauge of strings sets effects tuning. If the guitar plays sharp and you change the set to a smaller gauge core with a smaller G the guitar might play less sharp. The reason is because the smaller core in the overwound strings changed the amount of stiffness where the string is stopped. So now you ask why does this matter? If you have not seen the problem yet, here it is, I'll say it again: When the string gets stiffer at the stopping point, it changes the vibrating length of the string relative to the scale. The compensation is to lengthen the string so when it is stopped, the length and scale length are more correct. That is compensation in a nutshell. It's much more complex to try to figure it out so we generalize by making the saddle set back a few mm depending on how long the scale is and how high the action will be. A shorter scale like 650mm gets slightly less compensation than 660mm. Some guitar makers have worked out compensated nuts where you go after the problem of the G string from both ends by setting G longer and the other strings at various lengths at the nut- in addition to saddle set back. Even the most analytical guitar makers will tell you that the system is not perfect. I hope that was not confusing and spelled out some of the reasons why flamenco guitar saddles are compensated.
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Date Feb. 25 2014 1:23:24
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