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Truss Rod Adjustment

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Plank_Spanker

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Some say to adjust the rod with full tension on the neck. Some say to loosen the strings a bit. I fall into the latter group - about a 1/4 turn at a time, let it settle, and work from there.

What sayeth the gurus here?
 
Since the purpose of the truss rod is to adjust neck bow which results from string tension, I adjust it with with full tension.
 
I'm really paranoid about rounding out the head of the trussrod, so I'm thinking a little less tension when I tweak it will help prevent that. It's a little more work retuning and checking after the neck settles, but I've always done it this way.
 
I see your point Plank. It's also interesting how guitars vary when it comes to adjusting the truss rod. On my more expensive guitars (which are still not very expensive) the truss rod turns very easily. On my D10S, which was only a $200 guitar, you have to apply a lot pressure to turn that little bugger. Now I am talking acoustics here. I've never adjusted the truss rod on my one, lonely little electric.
 
I've seen that a number of manufacturers and techs recommend adjusting the truss rod at anywhere from 1/8 to 1/4 of a turn until you get the proper neck relief. You definitely don't want to over-tighten the truss rod, and you don't want too loose of a truss rod either where you can shoot an arrow with the neck of your guitar. Fender for example, recommends about .010 (the size of a high E string) relief at the 8th fret.
 
Good discussion.

I've made literally hundreds of relief adjustments on guitars and have never once had a problem doing it with full string tension on. In fact I get better results quicker without letting the neck de-stress between adjustments.

I also change strings one at a time for the same reason.
 
Full tension sounds a bit scary.

I'll stick to adjusting my truss rods while the strings are at concert pitch. ;)
 
Last edited:
Plank_Spanker said:
Some say to adjust the rod with full tension on the neck. Some say to loosen the strings a bit. I fall into the latter group - about a 1/4 turn at a time, let it settle, and work from there.

What sayeth the gurus here?
Dont do that with a bass I have see it done now the truss rod has to be adjusted via a screw drive wacked in to the truss rod
 
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