8daypsalmist
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- Apr 5, 2011
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Just bought my first Ukulele used here on the Forum. Seemed like the action was a little high so I emailed the Distributer to find out what factory spec should be. Guitar player for years, I am used to action of 4/64 to 6/64 at the 12th fret (normal factory spec for most acoustic guitar manufacturers).
The action on this uke was about 7 to 8/64, so I sanded the bottom of the saddle down slightly, trying to get to 5/64 (took care of some sharp fret ends while I was at it). Not getting there - I'm just a smidge above 6/64 and running out of saddle. There needs to be enough break angle for the string to push down over the saddle and if I go further I'm gonna loose that.
Usually, when you sight down the fretboard of a guitar (from the headstock to the bridge), the plane (or straightedge, if you have one) should meet perfectly at the place where the saddle begins to protrude from the bridge. On older guitars, years of neck tension can begin to shift the neck, causing that plane to begin to point south of that point. Hence, action raises. Adjust action by filing bottom saddle until there is no saddle left and then, the only options are remove and shave the bridge or reset the neck.
Shouldn't Uke neck angle's be the same as guitar? Do nylon strings really exert enough tension to pull the neck that bad? What alternative might I have? It is not an expensive enough instrument to warrant an expensive repair like a neck reset.
Thanks for your help!
Peace,
James
The action on this uke was about 7 to 8/64, so I sanded the bottom of the saddle down slightly, trying to get to 5/64 (took care of some sharp fret ends while I was at it). Not getting there - I'm just a smidge above 6/64 and running out of saddle. There needs to be enough break angle for the string to push down over the saddle and if I go further I'm gonna loose that.
Usually, when you sight down the fretboard of a guitar (from the headstock to the bridge), the plane (or straightedge, if you have one) should meet perfectly at the place where the saddle begins to protrude from the bridge. On older guitars, years of neck tension can begin to shift the neck, causing that plane to begin to point south of that point. Hence, action raises. Adjust action by filing bottom saddle until there is no saddle left and then, the only options are remove and shave the bridge or reset the neck.
Shouldn't Uke neck angle's be the same as guitar? Do nylon strings really exert enough tension to pull the neck that bad? What alternative might I have? It is not an expensive enough instrument to warrant an expensive repair like a neck reset.
Thanks for your help!
Peace,
James