Here's the other mod I've been doing to a couple of my strats - it would apply to teles as well, I guess, or any bolt on.
I have to admit I believed more in this one than the other one
here. But I could never be @rsed to put the effort in.
Both my Roadworns were very bright, almost hard sounding, strats. In many ways I like this, but sometimes you wanna get mellow...
Anyway, I was having a problem with my latest one, the maple boarded 50s version. I could feel (and sometimes hear) the neck moving sideways while I was waving it around doing Ritchie Blackmore impersonations. It wasn't moving enough to alter the tuning noticably, but it was bugging me.
I'd also noticed the general alignment of neck > pickups > bridge was not all it could be.
I tried all the usual loosen/tighten the neck bolts business. But a) I couldn't get the neck to stop shifting while I played, and b) I couldn't move the neck far enough to line the strings up how I wanted.
The string alignment was not the end of the world - the side where I might have been falling off, the treble side, I wasn't falling off unless I was being really deliberately sloppy and trying to fall off...
But the occasionally "click" noise was bugging me. Why couldn't I get the neck to "stay put"? Then I realised that on both of my Roadworns, the neck pocket is
really tight. On the 60s, if you loosen the bolts, the neck didn't even move (with the strings at concert pitch!). What if the pocket was
so tight that you couldn't get the neck down on the 50s? A visual inspection seemed to confirm this
So the first guitar attacked was the 50s.
1) Neck off
2) Remove all finish from the sides of the pocket
3) Remove all finish from the sides of the neck where they touch the pocket
4) Light sanding of the base of the pocket to ensure nice and smooth
5) Offer the neck up again
It was a bit looser, but not enough to line the neck up... and also, in my estimation, not enough to get the the neck and the base of the pocket into firm contact... so I took my life in my hands and did the following:
6) Slightly widened the
bottom of the bass side of the pocket
This seemed to be going according to plan. So I thought "while I'm at it", I might as well do the "mod" that seems to be popular:
7) The neck has a bunch of stickers on it, one of which is under the lacquer, so remove all of this for "better contact".
I put it all back together, retuned, then loosened the neck and set it at the angle I wanted and retightened. Everything hunky dory. Neck no longer moves (I had even been considering adding glue like mentioned in
here if it hadn't cured it), the strings line up a lot better now, and...
hey wow!! Can you hear that??!
There seemed to be "more" accoustically. It was still bright, but there was an added warmth as well. It seemed a spot louder. And these were the same strings. I'd expected a slight difference plugged in, because I'd moved the strings in relation to the pups... but I hadn't even plugged it in yet! When I did... oh yum...
I got the 60s Roadworn out to compare, and yes, the 50s had become more rounded but had kept its bite. I promptly broke a string on the 60s, so I thought sod it... and whipped the strings and neck off. I went through exactly the same procedure (take finish off the sides of the pocket and neck, smooth the base of the pocket, remove the neck's stickers and lacquer where it contacts the base of the pocket). The only thing I didn't do was deliberately widen the pocket - there wasn't any problem that needed fixing here.
Reset, restrung... same effect. More "wood" to the tone. (Obviously, this one's harder to judge - the strings were changed).
But overall - I'd say it's well worth having a peek inside your bolt-on's neck pocket. It didn't actually take that long, and it seems to have more effect than I'd have given it credit for. (Caveat - if you like the tone already, stickers/gunk/and all, then a change in tone might not be what you want - think about this first! :lol:)