<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"><tr><td class="SmallText"><b>cytania wrote on Tue, 30 January 2007 11:49</b></td></tr><tr><td class="quote">
I'm holding the frets hard to hold chords and strumming too heavy.
Is the solution; 1) Restring with 11s like my acoustic, get better tone or 2) Learn to play softer and enjoy bending and modulating electric style.
If restring is worth doing what are all these stories I've heard about the neck bowing and the action increasing? I was reading reviews of semis and there are some tales there of neck's going 'creak.. crack' when strung with even medium strings. How tough are modern electrics and are there makes with better neck/body joint systems (bolted, glued or all-thru?) I should be auditioning?
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{edited for response by Bootleger}
Cytania,
Per above you mentioned that you are choking your neck (no pun intended) and that string gauges are to light for you. Well I would go for both answer# 1 & 2. Change your strings and learn to become a finesse player. A guitar is like a woman it does not want to be mistreated or abused, it wants to be loved.
As far as restringing with higher gauges strings you would adjust your neck truss rod due to the added tension of the string gauge you desire. The thicker the string gauge the more tension (or stregnth) is needed to stretch the string to tune. Hence forth the pressure transulates to stress on your neck and bridge.
It's like a bow, when strung it becomes curved. A guitar neck is not made to curve like a bow or you would not be able to form cords. With a correct set up, hand pressure is required to play a clean note/chord.
A guitar depending in who's hands they are in are built to bring enjoyment not to be twisting off necks. The advantages of the neck's you mentioned each have their merits. A bolt on neck is cheaper and easier to make and put on/change on a guitar. If you don't like that neck buy a new one and change it. A glued or set neck as their also called are made similar to the bolt on neck and are glued in place. The result is better sustain, you also have to cut your neck pocket with a 3 degree angle because set necks usually use tune-o-matic bridges and need it to keep tune. A thru neck is built from one piece of wood the legnth of the guitar with the sides or wings as their called. This process takes time and time is money. Hope this makes it clear as mudd.
Bootleger
Bootleger Guitars.