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Trem Distance To Nut Question


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On this page at StewMacs:

http://www.stewmac.com/freeinfo/I-1110.html

the distance for a line that goes thru the screw holes for a trad Fender (or Wilky) trem to the nut is supposed to be 25.25"

(for a 25.5" Fender scale)

Could it be assumed that for a 25" scale (PRS) that distance from post line to nut would be 24.75" ?

(using the same trem that is)

And for a 24.75" scale (Gibson) that distance would become 24.5" ?

(in each case 1/4" less than the overall scale?)

Is it a straight reduction, or does it change with the scale?

(even though the movable saddles give lotsa play room)

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I'm a complete noob so keep that in mind, and this isnt a direct answer to your question. One guitar building book I have says to adjust the saddles out as far as they can go towards the neck, and mount the bridge with the saddles at the scale length measurement. I installed a new bridge on a freinds bass and it worked perfectly. I'd be curious if anyone has an opinion on that method.

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I'm a complete noob so keep that in mind, and this isnt a direct answer to your question. One guitar building book I have says to adjust the saddles out as far as they can go towards the neck, and mount the bridge with the saddles at the scale length measurement. I installed a new bridge on a freinds bass and it worked perfectly. I'd be curious if anyone has an opinion on that method.

That is pretty much the best method. A lot of times it is recomended though to only adjust 2/3-3/4 of the way out. Sometimes the high E string actually needs to move forward for proper intonation, so this still gives you some room to move. Where as all the way forward doesn't give you any.

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The saddle never needs to move forward for correct intonation, assuming the bridge has been installed accurately. Some people like to save themselves a couple of millimetres wiggle room to accomodate human error, but strictly speaking a saddle never needs to move forward to compensate.

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