GHatcher wrote:
A couple of bridge related questions that I hope someone can steer me correctly on.
1. I have almost completed my 2nd build and almost put my first back together. On both, when cutting the height of the neck block, I used the starting thickness of the top and did not account for final thinning of the top. As a result, my fingerboard was slightly off the top. To compensate for this, I added a bit of thin veneers between the fingerboard and the top. As a result, I would think that the fingerboard is not only a bit high in relation to the top. but also in relation to the bridge and saddle. So my saddle will likely be a bit taller than normal - not much but a bit taller. Any concerns here? Was there a better solution than adding the veneer strips to support the fingerboard?
2. Second question: I have noticed that the front corners/wings of my bridges have tended to curl up a bit after I sand the bottoms to fit the curve of the top. What should I do to remedy / prevent this?
Thanks, Greg
Reading this I get the impression that the neck fitting (neck angle set) was either misunderstood or non existent. When you fit a neck you fit, in the terms of a pilot, you fit both heading (left to right to match centerline) and attitude (neck pitch up and down to achieve the proper fretboard to bridge plane relationship). Typically the angle of the neck would be 1.5 degrees back but the stack up of tolerances accumulated during the building process can cause this to need to be adjusted during fit up to achieve the proper fretboard/ bridge plane relationship.
I will assume you used a bolt on M&T neck. If you over sanded the top to the point that fretboard extension was proud of the top when installing the neck and needed shim. In my opinion the better fix would have been to shorten the bottom of the tenon, dowel plug the neck block bolt holes and re drill the holes lower or elongate them as needed. This would bring the fretboard down to the top for a better fit and fretboard/bridge plane relationship.
I can’t imagine the neck being more than 2mm or so proud of the top. The bolt holes in the neck block should have given about 1mm in adjustment down as the holes in the neck block are typically 2mm larger than the diameter of the bolts. So the most that would need to be taken off the tenon would be 2mm and the holes elongated or dropped 1-1.5mm.
Tall saddles lead to wear on the saddle slot over time. I had rather have a .75-1 degree neck back angle than end up with a ¼” or taller saddle beyond the bridge.