The guitar is an American made Fender standard telecaster with a lacquered maple fretboard. The client is a senior (read older and experienced) professional musician and probably has at least a dozen other telecasters. His string preference is always the same. I've seen a post like this go south on other forums talking about some teles and strats having stiffer strings than others. The geometry is exactly the same on each and in this case, the guitar plays flawlessly with no tuning stability issues or any other problems.
My thought is that the fretboard is causing a sort of friction as a fretted note is bent across. Because the tip of the finger is being pulled as the note is bent, the skin is pulled in such a manner that it underminds the hold that the player has on the string and to achieve his step and a half or two-step bend he has to work harder. The client is a blues player and half of the time is bending notes. The lacquer on the neck is what came from the factory. I was thinking of a light coat of satin or even using a light coat of lacquer sanding sealer.
Thoughts???
My thought is that the fretboard is causing a sort of friction as a fretted note is bent across. Because the tip of the finger is being pulled as the note is bent, the skin is pulled in such a manner that it underminds the hold that the player has on the string and to achieve his step and a half or two-step bend he has to work harder. The client is a blues player and half of the time is bending notes. The lacquer on the neck is what came from the factory. I was thinking of a light coat of satin or even using a light coat of lacquer sanding sealer.
Thoughts???
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