Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Late 70s Fender Jazz Bass Neck Straightening Challenge

According to The Guitar Dater Project, this Fender Jazz Bass "was made at the Fullerton Plant (Fender - CBS Era), USA in 1977 - 1978." That's the good news. The bad news is that it was submerged during the great flood of 2013, and damaged beyond repair (so thought the original owner). Rather than let this beauty go to waste, he gifted it to the current owner; pro bass player Albert Yap. Albert, in turn, wasted no time in sending the bass to a luthier friend in Jakarta.

That luthier did an awesome job of restoring this vintage Jazz Bass, I must say. As the original sunburst finish was a goner, he stripped the body and refinished it natural. The neck was also refretted with jumbo frets and refinished in a very impressive vintage tint. One critical point: the luthier did warn Albert that the truss rod was maxed out, and could snap if anyone ever tried to tighten it further.

Everything was roses until the day when the neck started to develop excessive upbow, resulting in overly high action that made the bass unplayable. Remembering that the truss rod was already maxed out, Albert brought it to me in the hope that I had an alternative solution.

Flexing the neck told me that the truss rod was still intact and doing its job. I inserted a 1/8" hex wrench into the bullet nut, and it was frozen solid -- I couldn't even loosen it! After a few days of heat/cold treatment and lots of lube, I managed to loosen and remove the nut completely. There was lots of gunk to be removed from the inside threads of the nut and threaded portion of the truss rod, that I can tell you.

After taking measurements, I realized that it wasn't the truss rod that was maxed out; but rather the nut itself. The threaded end of the truss rod had reached the end of the threaded channel of the bullet nut, and that's why the nut could not be tightened any further. So now, I had to find a way to create more space in the threaded channel of the nut. 

Based on this understanding, I fashioned a couple of truss rod washers that would be slid onto the truss rod before threading on the nut. If all went well, I'd then be able to tighten the truss rod even further. But first, I had to clamp the neck and use heat treatment to gradually force it into a backbow, exposing more of the threaded portion of the truss rod; thereby creating space for the washers. This approach was effective, thankfully; and I was finally able to tighten the truss rod until the fretboard was dead flat.

This being achieved, it was time to do a fret dress. The frets were leveled and recrowned in the usual way, and the bass restrung and tuned to pitch. The sun was shining, and the birds were singing. It was a happy day when Albert came to pick up his beloved bass. Understandably so, for he'd not seen his baby for close to two months.

Then, about two weeks later, he called me to say that the bass had become unplayable once more. History had repeated itself! I was sorely disappointed, to say the least; and told myself that I had better settle this matter once and for all. This time round I repeated what I'd done earlier, albeit going a little more aggressively on the heat treatment. After a month or so, I managed to get the neck to behave itself under tension. Final adjustments were made by Albert himself (he normally does his own setup); who declared the bass playable.

I'm keeping my fingers crossed that the neck stays this way for many years to come, and gives its owner countless hours of bass-playing pleasure. 
 
 



















Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Yamaha SG-2000

First introduced in July 1976, the Yamaha SG-2000 represents, in my humble opinion; the epitome of Japanese solidbody guitar craftsmanship. It's no wonder then, that in its 1978 catalog, Yamaha describes the SG-2000 as being targeted towards "those who demand the very finest in both feel and sound." That being said, let's take a look at some of this guitar's distinguishing features.

Body
  • Five-ply binding
  • Carved, "mildly figured" three-piece maple top
  • "T-Cross maple and mahogany construction:" laminated maple and mahogany body, with the grain of the center section "set perpendicular" to the sides
  • Contoured back, top waist "scoop"
  • Deep double cutaways 
Neck
Three-piece mahogany/maple/mahogany laminated neck-through design

Fretboard
Bound black mahogany (not ebony), 22 frets, 24.75" scale length, 13" radius, mother-of-pearl "split-wing" inlays

Headstock
Five-ply binding, "double-dipped shape," block lettering logo, three-piece floral inlay.

Hardware
  • Gold-plated 
  • Fully adjustable bridge rests on two thumbwheels that screw into a recessed solid brass sustain block/plate
  • Tailpiece features a "harp and scroll" motif
  • "Precise torque" tuning machines (15:1 ratio) with "kidney shaped" knobs 
Electronics
  • Two volume pots, two tone pots (no push-pull coil split function), 3-way toggle switch
  • Pickup, switch and control cavities fully shielded with shielding paint
  • Two "powerful open-type" Alnico V humbuckers with "individually adjustable polepieces." Three machine screws allow for pickup height and alignment adjustments ("tri-mounting")  

The tobacco brown SG-2000 featured today was in particularly bad shape when sent to me; most probably due to prolonged neglect and (I suspect) abuse. Grime, rust, crud, tarnish, dings and dents was the order of the day here. On the plus side, I noted that the guitar had been recently been refretted and fitted with a bone nut. The electronics were a tad noisy, but this was soon cured with a few squirts of electrical contact cleaner.

Perhaps the toughest task I had to deal with was removing as much rust, crud and grime from the gold-plated hardware without taking off too much metal. Thankfully, I managed to accomplish this via electrolysis. Then there was the black mahogany fretboard, suffering from years of solidified sweat and grime caking the wood in between the badly tarnished frets. It took lots of careful scraping, lighter fluid, lemon oil, 0000 steel wool and Autosol to get the job done; but the results were worth it.

After reinstalling the hardware, this baby was given an all-round wax and polish, strung up with 10s, and plugged into an amp for a final check. Boy, did it sing!

References
Premier Guitar
Yamaha Musicians Forum
Vintage Yamaha Guitars
Vintage Guitar Magazine


























Friday, May 31, 2019

River Blues Band at LIBRA 2018 Vol 2 Langkawi

Event: Langkawi International Blues Roots Aseana (LIBRA) Vol 2
Venue: Laman Padi, Langkawi
Date: 29th December, 2018
Accomodation: de Baron Resort, Langkawi
Image/Video Credit: Azmi Alias
YouTube Videos: "Don't Let Me be Misunderstood" | "Blues untuk Aku" | "I Watch You"