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#1 (permalink) |
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TDPRI Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago
Posts: 32
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Fret buzz on new MIM Standard Tele
I have been playing acoustic guitar for several years now but am new to the electric. My main guitar is a Taylor 514 that I use for fingerstyle playing. I am accustomed to a fairly light touch due to the responsiveness of this guitar.
I have a new MIM Standard Tele and am experiencing more fret buzz than I believe should be there. As I have been playing this guitar for the last couple of days the buzzing seems to be getting a little worse. The shop I bought it from claimed to have set it up completely. However, they also told me fret buzz should be expected on an electric, especially one with a maple neck. I find this explanation completely unreasonable and will work it out with them later. In the meantime, I would like to ask all of you for your opinions. How much buzz is reasonable to expect on such a Tele? Thanks for your help.
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Peter |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Poster Extraordinaire
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Their response is partially correct....
.....if you have the action set "baby-low" (like I like it!) and you play pretty aggressively, it is pretty much inevitable you'll have *some* fret-buzz--but it shouldn't be excessive.
Your guitar likely needs a good set up--by someone other than the shop you bought it from. By the way, it's not unusual for a guitar to "change" a little over the course of a few days--humidity, temp, etc can all play into that. Good luck, once you have it set up well, I'm certain you'll enjoy that Tele as much as that nice Taylor you own!
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Think I'll pack it in and Buy a pickup Take it down to LA... |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Kentucky
Age: 26
Posts: 286
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+1 on the setup.
You need to setup every guitar you buy/own to your own liking. I generally have mine setup by a good friend of mine that always gets my stuff right, and apparently knows more about what I like than i do! Those MIM teles generally need some tweaking from the store. Start with the truss rod and string height, then set the pup height, set your intonation, and if you really cant get what you want out of it you may look at getting a new nut cut the way you want. I really dislike newer fender Nuts that come from the factory. -jerry |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Doctor of Teleocity
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Bakersfield Ca.
Age: 58
Posts: 12,876
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Try this change your playing style slightly.
Turn up the amp and strum the guitar way softer than you do an acoustic. It also probably needs more neck relief. The guys that tested it might have had a real light touch and it didnt buzz when they played it. Take it to a pro who is really good for a complete real setup not the music store kind it will be the best $40-60 you ever spent.
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I'm so blind my seeing eye dog needs glasses. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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Make sure you have done the "3 finger string stretch"
at the 12th fret. This is 3 fingers beneath the string, lift up 3/4" or so on each string. Repeat this several times until the string holds pitch at least very close and "set in". I've played new ones that buzz and this eliminated it. That and often the strings on a new model are either not that great or have been on it a while since leaving the factory. So change to new if the stretch doesn't help. If you get a little buzz acoustically above the 14th fret that is not audible through the amp, it is fairly standard but can be eliminated if desired.
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"Somewhere between culture and agriculture" |
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