Support the channel here - / davesimpson Dave Music Here - davesimpson.bandcamp.com I hope this vid is informative. :) 0:00 Lets Talk Setups 39:18 Away
Great video. It didn’t take me long to determine only I could setup my guitar to my preferences. Once you get it right there’s no turning back. It’s not so much about perfection as it is getting the tone and feel that inspires you and makes playing a joy.
Deffo agree. I never used to understand the need for setting up my guitar. But now the difference is something I fee every time I play. Like I love how my pickups sound when they are flush to the body
excellent video...im old enough to remember the DIY ethic of punk...so saving money and have a sense of pride and ownership in the fact that you can work it out and do it for yourself is great. To me you represent the best of the internet...opening up and freely giving information to help people on their way
This is actually pretty cool cos recently I wanted to get into learning to setup guitars myself instead of taking it to the shop, and now you made this video which will help a lot! Cheers Dave! :D
"Don't worry, you can't break it" is good advice. Doing your own setups in an invaluable thing to learn. There is no "wrong" way to do it. Do it by feel. Don't worry about how many .000" someone in some forum said the action HAS to be. I like my neck almost completely flat with as little relief as possible, for example. The key is to make adjustments in small increments, especially the truss rod, which I suppose you COULD theoretically break if you overdo it.
"Learn to do it yourself" is exactly what Robert Fripp (yes, really) said to me when I asked for his advice last year. What's more, I can prove it too because it's on one of the Toyah and Robert's Agony Aunts vids they recorded during lockdown. "Les from Birmingham but now in Oregon" as he called me all the way though 😁. Oh, great vid here btw. I used to be very 'ginger' about messing with the setup. Gradually losing that now. Vids such as this were a big help in losing that fear. Have a great weekend.
You haven't wasted any of our time, and I found this video extremely helpful - exactly what I was looking for, a second opinion on Strat setups and this video was perfect timing because I have a couple strings that buzz a little like yours did with Mr. Red and now I know how to fix it and confidently go into trying it so THANK YOU!!
I'm in the process of learning all this, and found this so helpful. Thankyou. Edit my ibanez strings are too high for me, so will sort that out, also didn't know about the pickup situation. These series are going to be so helpful for me and learners and intermediate players, or even "expert" guitarist. Love it, thankyou again. ✌️🤟
2 years ago I’d take it to a friend to set it up and change strings cause of my anxiety and not wanting to ruin anything. Finally took the plunge and Learnt to change strings and over the last 2 years have learnt basic setup and maintenance besides fret levelling and shaping nuts etc. so glad I did and actually enjoy it now and it keeps me interested working with tools and makes me appreciate the guitars a lot more.
Hi Dave, Great informative vid mate. Explained very well considering it's hard to explain. Plus like you say experience comes into play big time here. As does personal preference.! Nice to still see your brimming with enthusiasm too and your rock solid passion and verve! Keep Rockin. Band you, John Joe and of course Ci Ci Majorette! Regards Mick.🙏🎸
So right about tastes being changed. They absolutely will. As you go on youll get more and more familiar and zoned in to exactly how you like it. I guess its the old - first we learn what we arent, and we immitate etc - then we find what we are.
I absolutely agree; setting up guitars yourself saves money and may spare you a lot of trouble. And it's fun too! An accomplishment. Once upon a time, I gave my beloved Hohner 5-string headless bass to a, let's say, renowned guitar shop here in Hamburg for a setup and got it back completely messed up. Even without lots of knowledge (and with some help from books and the internet) I could do it better. I am not that scared any more and like the procedure, even if it's not 100 % perfect. Thanks for this video, the advice and encouragement!
About 7 yrs ago ( feels like yesterday still ) I’ve purchased my 1st Floyd Rose bridge on a metal guitar. After watching a few vids on youtube I decided to do maintenance work on it. I did it all correctly so I thought until I check my work after it all settled down for 24hrs. My bridge was diving really bad one way • next day diving the other way 😡. Like you say “ You can’t break it “ .. After keeping after it , what a great satisfaction on figuring it all out and saving $100’s of dollars instead of someone else to fix it whenever I mess with my Floyd Rose bridge.. Btw : when messing with truss rods , always give truss rod 24hrs to settle even if you just turn rod just a little bit or quarter turn AND do not play it during that 24hrs‼️, and then you need to adjust again - BAM don’t touch it again for another 24hrs. I once took 3days to adjust truss rod and my reward was a happy guitar neck.
Great vid! I will say from my experience regarding the truss rod, whether or not you'll be able to set it & forget it seems to depend on the climate in your area. Over here in Lithuania the temperature and humidity differences between seasons are pretty extreme, and usually at least twice a year I notice either extra relief or not enough relief in the neck and have to make an adjustment.
Been making and setting up for years. Nice clean action - Its usually a combo of relief and string angle. Too much relief is often a cause of choking out in my experience. Great video though. Always good to understand our own preferences
Thanks Dave, I’ve just bought a 31 yr old Squier Silver Series and can’t get the sound I want out of her, I feel alot more confident in doing some messing with settings now 👍
Love the video from what I've watched so far. Do you ever experiment with refinishing your guitars, and if so, would you make a video on it? I have a nice Vintage V6 Icon that I want to try and refinish, and I think it'd be both fun and interesting to see you do it.
Great vid mate. I do most of the guitar maintenance myself as well, although sometimes, you are stuck. Whenever you have the feeling, oops, i dont know how to fix it, you can still bring it to a luthier.
Learning to do your own setup is a must for any serious guitar player. Very few guitars are setup to play at their best out of the box. Once you have got past the learning to play stage, you will then know what you do and don't like about your current guitar. Taking it to a good luthier is expensive, and even a good one can only try to get as close as possible to what you ask them to achieve. A bad one can leave you with a worse setup, and there are plenty of bad ones from my experience.
True. I've had a couple of very disappointing luthier experiences in the recent past where I naturally assumed some positive transformation of the instrument would occur. On both occasions the setup was worse than it had been before. Also, both failed to notice the unwanted movement in the neck - which I eventually fixed myself. It can be very hit-and-miss, hence 'DIY'.
Once you have the correct equipment to give a proper set up, guitar set ups are enjoyable, relaxing and an awesome way to get that accomplishment feeling. The tools are not that expensive. For the price of a set up, you can buy most of what you’ll ever need to give any guitar a proper set up. I always found that when I got a set up in the past, they always set the pickups too high. I’m always making adjustments anyway. Anyway, awesome video sir. Thanks
Truss rod adjustments are a recurring thing in countries with a varrying climate. It's not much but I very much have a dry and a humid set-up. Unless you have some carbon fibre or a roasted maple neck, the wood will bend back and forth with variations. The other obvious case is when changing string gauge, which a beginner is bound to do at some point if only out of curiosity.
Hope to see a video about adjusting the 6 screws in the bridge, tremolo spring tension, the claw and how you flush the bridge to the body. Thanks Dave!
Good info. I have some half way decent guitars but they are all used and older. All suffer from fret leveling problems. Due to age and wear not bad guitars. If after all the setup you still notice problems, check your frets. Without level frets nothing else matters. After all my years of playing I still have not invested the money to buy the tools to fix them myself. 🍻
I'm a lefty . My very 1st acoustic was a dealer converted New Alvarez 5066 right handed that never sounded right on the B-string, made me think I was tone deaf for that frequency until I discovered years later that the dealer routed an "X" into the bridge but never installed the correct nut. Yes, you are definitely better off learning how to do your own setups.
I agree, it is better to do it yourself. It’s faster, cheaper and customized to your needs, without having to explain it to someone else. But … you have to have some frame of reference, so I recommend taking it to an experienced tech a few times to get an idea of what’s involved and what works/doesn’t for you.
I wish I had this video when I got my 1st Strat. Being a newbie back then my experience with changing the first set of strings to messing around with the bridge that I mess up on , has to look at pics of Strats bridges to figure out how to reset my bridge to factory settings. (I didn’t know i could move saddles to my liking , I always keep it at factory settings .. that changes now ) Well your so right about figuring your guitar out and not breaking it , I survived .. Last night my A string Buzzed 😡 , so I got 10s , 9s , Hendrix strings .. I’m thinking Hendrix 🎸 mood coming on ..
Regarding not being able to break things... You want to be cautious about raising saddle height with strings under full tension, particularly if you are using heavy gauge strings, as you can damage the thread. Don't ask me how I know this.
Great video Dave loads of useful advice, information and encouragement. Just one thing. I couldn’t find a tuna, could I get away with using a salmon? 😜
I always found it a little strange that people are so hesitant to do their own setups (like on reddit, for e.g. the common advice will be "get a professional to do it"). When I got my first guitar as a teenager, it didn't take me long before I was like "Nope, these strings are too high" and I started messing with it. Completely threw out my intonation and it took me ages to figure out how to fix that again lmao. BUT... On one hand, I can understand the mentality of thinking that these few planks of wood must be such a finely tuned, delicate machine that they cannot be tinkered with by mortal hands (cause I had that mentality a little bit too), but at the same time... You've gotta get your hands "dirty". And it's really just a few screws... I mean, I have a jazzmaster too, which can be such a pain-in-the-ass balancing act, but all I'm trying to say is: You definitely can't do any serious damage, so I like your attitude towards it. And I still suck at setting up guitars, I'm truly terrible at it. I'm still learning, really. But there's no reason to NOT do it yourself. Electronics might be optional, but even then... Hmm everyone should try swapping a pickup too, I think. lol. I joke, it's all optional. To each their own. But I do think there's a tendency to grossly exaggerate the delicateness of it.
I have two Telecasters. I have my bridge pick-up pretty high and always get a high gain sound on the amp then wind the volume back to 7 or 8 and it’s one of the best sounds in the World!
I somewhat disagree regarding changing set up preferences. I've had my Japanese Ibanez RG 770DX since 2008 and I have not changed the set up from how it left the factory. Still today I can't get close to replicating it on my other guitars. Some Fujigen wizardry I assume haha. Looking forward to the guides as I still struggle with setting up strat style bridges with individual saddles still. I learned all my set up knowledge on guitars with Floyd Rose systems so there's no individual string height adjustment as they already match the radius of the fretboard. Great video as always Mr Dave. Update - Your wise words on saddle height have helped immensely. Got my partscaster kit "The Green Machine" playing as well as it looks.
Davy good evening hope your enjoying Jon’s birthday I’m sure you are! Hey quick question do you play your strats in standard tuning like I’ve heard jon does.. even tho it does surprise since he was so influenced by hendrix.. I’ve been in e flat tuning so long my strat doesn’t even seem to like to go standard.. Always great to hear back from such a huge Jon fanatic …. You truly are a legend when it comes to emulating Jon’s sounds take care and thanks
I paid for my magnum opus partscaster to be set up and I still tweaked it when I had it back. I sort of wanted that confirmation that I was doing it correctly in the first place. I already do soldering and nut installation, but I'm not brave enough for fret work just yet...
The neck IS the guitar, basically. If you find a neck you love everything else can be changed. Great video and being able to set up your own instrument is essential, but if you do find a really good Luthier they're worth their weight in gold. Imo.
Dearest Dave, PLEASE do a little ditty about soldering. I have a absolutely beautiful USA dean Z that needs a volume pot and jack replacement but despise 2-3 week and $$$ aspect of taking it in. Your amazing Bruh.
My Stratocaster relief is set around.12 thou 10-46 E flat tuning, any lower the stings will touch the frets and I lose sustain any higher it doesn’t feel that great to play, it’s ready for a fret job soon 😊
The one thing I always find difficult to get rid of on my own is fret buzz especially when I try to lower the action a bit. It's hard to tell whether it's the nut or the frets or maybe the neck needs more or less relief and I don't know how to properly fret level and I feel like that's something that could actually require a more expensive fix if I do mess it up. This is definitely something I wish I could fix on my own.
little tip to add ,be aware with possi screws some possi screws are japanese screws they have a lesser depth and need a different possi driver or may round of screws.
Setting up the acoustic that's a whole different story putting things under the bridge that's what I did. It must take a lot of talent to set up a screwed-up acoustic
The acoustic guitar every year I live near Buffalo New York it goes out in the winter and if you leave it sit there it will go back in the neck in the spring LOL have two of them for each time of year and one of the neck will be right maybe
Hiya dave, thanks for the video. I was wondering what you use to lubricate the guitar nut? So far i've been using the lead of a cheap mechanical pencil and colouring in the inside of the nutslots directly, but I've also heard other people mention you need a small knife to scrape of a bit of graphite. Do you use either method, or the unfortunately named "nut sauce"? thanks in advance, much love
I think you sound like one of the Beatles... Which one was from around your neck of the woods that would have an accent like you? You always have great videos.,. This one is no exception
Hey Dave, great video! I have a quick question though, what to do when you have only one high fret on a guitar? Should you level all of them or can you just level that one? Thanks
Just bought a second hand fender strat and it's really really hard to bend. It has 010 strings but I have played those before. The foocking strings are just hard to move and I feel like I wasted money. I dont think 09s will help that much.
Hey man if you ever do a neck transplant for what ever reason. Go with warmoth ,thar=t desighn isgreat the neck wont go perfectly straight .Its a better neck.