In an age where people spend mucho mas dinero on Titanium parts than the guitar is worth, I thought I’d share a simple mod that significantly improves the punch, sustain and upper-mid character of a bolt-on guitar. I got this stuff here: Order Plastic Polycarbonate Sheet in Small Quantities at OnlineMetals.com
Shipping is expensive, but it's still a very cheap mod compared to Ti hardware for sure, and it probably makes more difference than a trem block upgrade. Those can be useful too, as long as your bridge doesn't damp more than the block.
Get a sheet of ~1mm thick Polycarbonate (Lexan). Much thicker would be impossible to cut evenly with scissors...I've tried. Thinner might not be rigid enough for the intended result, but I don't know...I just figured thicker is better. I ordered fom
1. Cut out a piece to fit snugly in the full area of the neck pocket with good strong scissors. Trimming to fit is not difficult, but don't reduce the length or width more than the pocket area, or the joint rigidity will be reduced – make sense? Maybe wear some thick gloves to protect your finger joints. I deadened the nerves in my index finger joints for a few weeks from the extreme pressure while cutting.
2. Cutting in from the inside edge of the piece, very carefully cut out the center area of the piece to ~1cm from around the edges, and cut and snap out spaces for the screws with needle nose pliers, being careful not twist and crack through to the ends. Hold the scissors wide open and firmly while cutting so you don't accidentally cut through all the way, or slip and cut yourself.
3. Install and adjust the action & pickups accordingly.
I've tried on several guitars. Bass punch and sustain is definitely better. While the highs are more glassy, I think Lexan is not so hard to make the sound brittle. The surface area of the hollowed out bracket increases coupling force, while allowing the neck heal to vibrate more freely. I think that produces a more open, rather than “constrained” attack quality than if the center area were not cut out. I really like the results on both Strat types I've done it too. It was an extension of experimenting with various washer materials in several guitars. I discovered that cut up Lexan picks produced the best type of sweet glassy quality. Ultex would be good too. Steel washers seemed more metallic sounding. While brass sounded very good, it didn't have high end quality for the sweet glassy sound I was after – sounding more Brass bell-like...no BS. While Brass is denser, I think Lexan is more elastic, so may damp less high end, and does not ring. Lexan is definitely harder than an Alder guitar body. It's closer to Rock Maple or harder without proteins, oils, or moisture to absorb more highs. Dropping a 1mm Lexan pick on a hard surface produces a pretty bright “ping”. Either way, it produced the best results. Acrylic would be good, but it's too brittle to cut with scissors. Washers tend to dig into the wood, so a bracket seemed the best solution...so far so good. It is possible for the neck to shift, but tightening it after a week or so of settling will probably prevent that. It actually makes a very solid connection.
I also plan to install a small door bolt under the trem springs as a trem stopper. It's supposed to work quite well.
Shipping is expensive, but it's still a very cheap mod compared to Ti hardware for sure, and it probably makes more difference than a trem block upgrade. Those can be useful too, as long as your bridge doesn't damp more than the block.
Get a sheet of ~1mm thick Polycarbonate (Lexan). Much thicker would be impossible to cut evenly with scissors...I've tried. Thinner might not be rigid enough for the intended result, but I don't know...I just figured thicker is better. I ordered fom
1. Cut out a piece to fit snugly in the full area of the neck pocket with good strong scissors. Trimming to fit is not difficult, but don't reduce the length or width more than the pocket area, or the joint rigidity will be reduced – make sense? Maybe wear some thick gloves to protect your finger joints. I deadened the nerves in my index finger joints for a few weeks from the extreme pressure while cutting.
2. Cutting in from the inside edge of the piece, very carefully cut out the center area of the piece to ~1cm from around the edges, and cut and snap out spaces for the screws with needle nose pliers, being careful not twist and crack through to the ends. Hold the scissors wide open and firmly while cutting so you don't accidentally cut through all the way, or slip and cut yourself.
3. Install and adjust the action & pickups accordingly.
I've tried on several guitars. Bass punch and sustain is definitely better. While the highs are more glassy, I think Lexan is not so hard to make the sound brittle. The surface area of the hollowed out bracket increases coupling force, while allowing the neck heal to vibrate more freely. I think that produces a more open, rather than “constrained” attack quality than if the center area were not cut out. I really like the results on both Strat types I've done it too. It was an extension of experimenting with various washer materials in several guitars. I discovered that cut up Lexan picks produced the best type of sweet glassy quality. Ultex would be good too. Steel washers seemed more metallic sounding. While brass sounded very good, it didn't have high end quality for the sweet glassy sound I was after – sounding more Brass bell-like...no BS. While Brass is denser, I think Lexan is more elastic, so may damp less high end, and does not ring. Lexan is definitely harder than an Alder guitar body. It's closer to Rock Maple or harder without proteins, oils, or moisture to absorb more highs. Dropping a 1mm Lexan pick on a hard surface produces a pretty bright “ping”. Either way, it produced the best results. Acrylic would be good, but it's too brittle to cut with scissors. Washers tend to dig into the wood, so a bracket seemed the best solution...so far so good. It is possible for the neck to shift, but tightening it after a week or so of settling will probably prevent that. It actually makes a very solid connection.
I also plan to install a small door bolt under the trem springs as a trem stopper. It's supposed to work quite well.
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