Hi!
I recently bought a new django guitar and after changing the strings from 10s to 11s I noticed that the trussrod resonates when i play some notes. Only way I could make this go away was to adjust the trussrod so that the neck has quite a lot of relief. I would favour to have a bit straighter neck but I just can't get rid of the buzzing trussrod. The note might change which makes the trussrod rattle inside the neck after tightening or loosing the trussrod. Is there anything else I could do?
Next step that I'm probably going to do is to take it to a luthier to inject some glue inside the neck. I think this is done by removing the neck dots and drilling small holes and injecting some glue this way. Is this a difficult process? I'm also curious what kind of glue would be the best choice for this operation?
Thanks,
Tomi
Comments
Makes sense! Thank you for the tips!
The guitar I play everyday (for now) I ordered without a rod at all for these reasons. I can fix the problems that might result from that choice and I wanted just wood and hide glue for whatever acoustic value it might have. I hope your diagnosis is wrong, but you might live with the hide glue option and skip using the rod just fine. I also ordered a really thick hunk of neck thinking it would be stable enough (It's been completely stable) and I love thick necks anyway. If you have a modern thin neck, I'd keep the rod working just in case.