Hello! i have a quite small question but it's something i've been wondering.
i recently did some intonating work on a punk rocker's gibson les paul. the guy usually plays with 10-46, but sometimes likes it nice and heavy with 12-54.. he's going into some studio work in 3 weeks and will make me do a full job on the guitar to make it sound in tune. all in standard tuning too... he doesn't really take much care of the guitar and his band is just starting to make it big locally, so i'm hoping to knock some sense into his head about maintaining his axe.
now, this les paul has a problem. the high E won't intonate properly, it's flat and the string is the shortest it can be. it's currently a .10....turning the saddle around won't fix the problem. will raising the gauge of the top strings give me a better chance at intonating it properly? or is it the opposite and going lower like .09 will fix it? i know les pauls are 24.75'' scale so in my logic, i'd set the guitar up for 11-49 and it should do the trick, it's a good middle ground between 10-46 and 12-54... i need to settle on a correct string gauge for him and for the intonation.. but that's where i spotted a possible issue...
the neck is nice and straight after the setup i did today, with decent relief for a guy that plays hard but the nut looks awfully low for the GBE strings but it's nice for the EAD strings... the angle is kinda shoddy though, the strings just make contact at the groove and kinda float over the rest of the nut... doesn't seem very good to me. (contact is about half and half. ..half of the nut holds the string, while the other half just floats over... with a very rounded kinda shape...) it seems like it's been sanded from above.
is this common gibson practice or the work of a shoddy tech? i don't see many gibsons at my shop.... but something tells me the nut needs some work. (it was bought around 3-4 years ago) i think the poor high e intonation is probably due to that nut. there's some open fret buzz on the G string when i hit it relatively hard. doesn't hurt sustain, but it's your typical G string zing sound that's not very pleasing for the ears, the B and E string also have this kind of buzz. it's not as obvious, but i can tell it might bug a discerning player.
anyway. hints, advice, help? much appreciated!