Dead spot...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well.. Had a good hour playing the new Schecter yesterday. All seemed fine until I bent the B string at the 15th fret (D) to E. It sustained noticably shorter than other notes fretted or bent. Not only was the sustain shorter but the decay at the end was unnatural.
The action was a touch over 1mm which is very low, so I thought it was likely being choked when I bent the string. I setup the guitar, adjusted the truss to take out a little excess relief and raised the action to about 4/64ths at the 12 on the high E which felt about right for me.
Still got the same issue. Had a good look at the frets and they're nice and level - no high or low frets and you can clearly see the string isn't making contact with any frets above at all - even when bent. At 4/64ths on a 14" radius board I shouldn't be getting any choking at all unless there was a high fret.
There is only two explanations at this point... A dead spot - an area where the natural resonance of the instrument - or part of the instrument - is cancelling out the played note causing it to die prematurely (If I understand the science correctly) or a duff string.
I'm going to experiment later today. I'll tune the string a half step down. If it's a dead spot then the spot will move. Failing that, i'll change the string.
It doesn't die immedaitely... I do get a couple of seconds sustain... It's just that unnatural - unmusical decay - almost like I wasn't keeping enough finger pressure on the string.
I doubt I could return it as i've had it since October and they may just say it's "one of those things". I could learn to live with it perhaps but i'd rather not.
If any of you guys can think of anything i've overlooked....
__________________
Thanks
Clay
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well.. Had a good hour playing the new Schecter yesterday. All seemed fine until I bent the B string at the 15th fret (D) to E. It sustained noticably shorter than other notes fretted or bent. Not only was the sustain shorter but the decay at the end was unnatural.
The action was a touch over 1mm which is very low, so I thought it was likely being choked when I bent the string. I setup the guitar, adjusted the truss to take out a little excess relief and raised the action to about 4/64ths at the 12 on the high E which felt about right for me.
Still got the same issue. Had a good look at the frets and they're nice and level - no high or low frets and you can clearly see the string isn't making contact with any frets above at all - even when bent. At 4/64ths on a 14" radius board I shouldn't be getting any choking at all unless there was a high fret.
There is only two explanations at this point... A dead spot - an area where the natural resonance of the instrument - or part of the instrument - is cancelling out the played note causing it to die prematurely (If I understand the science correctly) or a duff string.
I'm going to experiment later today. I'll tune the string a half step down. If it's a dead spot then the spot will move. Failing that, i'll change the string.
It doesn't die immedaitely... I do get a couple of seconds sustain... It's just that unnatural - unmusical decay - almost like I wasn't keeping enough finger pressure on the string.
I doubt I could return it as i've had it since October and they may just say it's "one of those things". I could learn to live with it perhaps but i'd rather not.
If any of you guys can think of anything i've overlooked....
__________________
Thanks
Clay
Comment