Thursday 19 January 2012

Setting up an Ibanez part 3: Neck Shimming


First of all, allow me to explain what a shim is. A shim is a piece of something (usually cardboard) that is used to elevate the angle of your guitar neck, so that the upper frets are angled slightly higher. This allows you to adjust your bridge's height higher while keeping the action on the fretboard low.

After straightening the neck and balancing the spring of the floating bridge of my friend's Ibanez, I realized that the action of the guitar is still ridiculously high. Somewhere around 2mm on the 12th fret. The worst part is, the trem posts have been screwed down to it's maximum. Meaning, I can't lower the trem posts anymore. So the only option that is left in this case, is to shim the neck at the neck pocket.


I proceed to cut a piece of cardboard (I used a name card) at about 1.5 cm, remove the neck from the neck pocket and placed it towards the very end of the neck pocket as shown in the picture. If you are using a piece of cardboard as a shim, please keep in mind that there is no real need for you to make the holes for the screw. Since the screws are already sharp, you can actually screw through the cardboard pretty easily.


Proceed to string up the guitar after re-attaching the neck back to the neck pocket. Make sure all 4 screws are tighten. We don't want the neck shifting around in the neck pocket after you have strung up the guitar. Some of the tuning instability can be attributed to this. After that, proceed to adjust the action of your guitar again and make sure that the neck is still straight and the spring of the bridge is balanced. Test every note on the neck and make sure that no notes are chocking or buzzing. Especially around the upper fret area. Notice in the picture on the super low action I was able to set for my friend. There weren't any buzzing or whatsoever. The guitar now plays like a dream. At least a shredder's dream.

3 comments:

  1. Bro, do consider using hard wood with acoustic properties like ebony, mahogany, rosewood, etc. instead. While it is not scientifically proven the quality differences between a cardboard shim and hardwood shim, it is more assuring to the guitar owners that materials possess acoustic properties. Moreover, cardboard compresses more than wood, thus the desired amount of alteration can change which diminishes the purpose of shimming. For your consideration.

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  2. Hi Bro thank you for your suggestion. I've tried using plaster, cardboard and wood for shims before and I find cardboard the best to work with. It is actually not true that the carboard can be compressed to the point of diminishing the purpose of shimming.

    The main reason I don't like to use wood is because most of the time, wood tends to be thicker than cardboard and it's hard to get the precise amount for the height I want to shim at. Additionally, being an electric guitar, the acoustic properties of the shim is too minimal to be noticeable (compared to the amount I use of course).

    Thank you for your suggestion though. Appreciate it.

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  3. thanks for your post.
    I recently bought a 520S and what it needs is shimming, the neck was perfect but the action was so highs¡and I really notice this
    tanks

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