Hi All,
I have a Gitane DG-255 that is in dire need of a good setup. It has the "proper" Argentine strings, but the action is ridiculously low. I want to bring it into a shop but I don't know if the local places will know how to setup a guitar for Gypsy Jazz. How high should the action be and should the bridge on the DG-255 be replaced with one that is higher?
Also, if anyone knows of a good place to get this done in the Worcester MA area that would be helpful. Thanks in advance and Happy New Year!
~ski
Comments
Learn how to play Gypsy guitar:
http://alexsimonmusic.com/learn-gypsy-jazz-guitar/
... in other words, assuming the neck is in good condition - you could probably go as low as 2.5mm on the low E & 2.0mm on the high E.
You measure this as the distance between the top of the 12th fret and the bottom of the string... IE - get some picks and add them up. If you want 2.5mm... put a 1.5mm and a 1mm pick together and see if the tip fits under the low E string at the 12th fret...
If you're raising the action by shimming - remember that you raise the action by half the height of the shim because the measurement point is 1/2 way between the nut and the bridge... so if you shim the bridge 1mm your action will rise by 0.5mm. If your shims are too thick, they may not conform well to the top for a number of reasons - but on Gitanes there is generally not a problem because top arch is not as pronounced and it reduces these problems so you should be able to shim quite a bit (maybe 2mm) But to be on the safe side... stack shims... in other words, if you're shimming 2mm... use 2 1mm shims of redwood or ebony or some other sufficiently hard wood (Oak, Myrtle, Pau Ferro, Maple, Bubinga... etc..)
Be aware that when you do this you're changing the intonation of your guitar because you're lengthening the string paths. So.. play a note at the 12th fret and then play a harmonic at the 12th fret. Do this both on the high and low E strings. The harmonic of the string and the fretted note should match. If the fretted note is higher than the harmonic then move the bridge back (doing this increases the string path of the fretted note by a higher percentage than the harmonic note because the same increase in length is applied to the full string in the harmonic - but only to the fretted portion of the string (1/2 the string) for the fretted note. This is how you set intonation on floating bridge guitars. You will never get a Gypsy Jazz guitar to be perfectly intoned on all 6 strings because the bridges are not compensated (the individual strings are not compensated on the bridge as they are on many other instruments like better quality archtop guitars) But if the high E & low E are intoned properly, then the guitar will be "close enough". I think the new style Gitane bridges may actually include a little compensation. It looked like it from Josh's picture anyway. The old Gitane bridges were sectional so they looked like they were compensated though they weren't or at least they didn't measure that way.... I could never get my old-bridge Gitane perfectly intoned on all strings though I got it darned close.
I bought the guitar over a year ago. I sent an email to the dealer from whom I purchased the guitar to explain the issue and inquire about Saga's warranty policy. I'm hoping I can get the guitar replaced under warranty. Has anyone had to deal with a similar situation? Is a replaced guitar wishful thinking on my part? Is it more likely that I will be stuck with a "bad" guitar? :?
You need a Major fret level / re crown and then a set up. The neck angle is low on the 255 but you just have to work with it. I do it all the time.
Cheers,
Josh
That sounds like a lot of work. How much does that type of repair work cost on average? It also sounds like I should try to find a tech who specifically knows how to work on this type of gutar....
I was thinking this might be the push I need to upgrade to the next level of GJ guitar. I've been considering a Manouche brand guitar. Do you think the same issues would apply to that guitar? If so, I wonder if I just need to factor that cost into the purchase decision....
Assuming that works, get a properly made bridge of the proper height & it will really help the sound!
John
Cheers,
Josh