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Originally Posted by Peter C
I agree that it's sometimes necessary to retune an instrument that has had its open strings tuned painstakingly.
Originally Posted by kris
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
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12-03-2024 08:57 AM
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Originally Posted by RJVB
Below: Maybe, this is the answer to better intonation.
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Although the reasoning in my post above (about altering the sounding vs. non-sounding proportion should still stand).
Wriggly frets could solve the compensation problem but theoretically only for 1 particular string set - and they'd have to be a lot less wriggly than in that photo unless you also want to use a different temperament.
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With electric guitar, due to the size of my fingertips, I can't really play any chords near the nut anyway, the strings are too close. I only play single lines.
However, on classical, I have the nut cut so I can play chords with a somewhat wide fingerboard. In that case, one of these days I'd like to setup my classical like this:
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Originally Posted by icr
I'd think that they would be easier to fit than a compensated nut on a neck.
These:
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Originally Posted by icr
I think I'm a sensitive little snowflake of a...
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