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Do you have 13s on it ?
Higher tension will bulge the top and may open the center seam.
I find 12s to be the max on the 0,00,000, and the 0000 ( such as mine)
As mentioned prior, I use 11s on my 00-18V.Last edited by bohemian46; 04-26-2020 at 09:51 PM.
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04-26-2020 09:20 PM
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04-27-2020, 03:41 AM #77joelf GuestOriginally Posted by bohemian46
My 'sin': leaving it uncased. I also, when 1st I took it home, saw 2 lines at top and figured they were wood threads, didn't tell the shop people. Wishful thinking...
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Joel,
Does your home have low humidity? It could be that the dry air is causing the wood to shrink a bit. Here's a trick that might work. Get some snack or sandwich sized ziplocs and punch holes in them. Then take a couple of clean cello sponges, cut to fit the baggies, get them wet and then squeeze them to get all the water out. Put them in the baggies, seal them and stick them inside the sound hole. Put the guitar in its case and close it up. Check the baggies periodically, rewetting as necessary, and monitor the crack.
If you're lucky, the wood will expand and seal the crack up. It's worth a shot.
Joe
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04-27-2020, 02:05 PM #79joelf GuestOriginally Posted by bonnerj
I'll try it, though. No action from the shop. She called me today---closed by ordinance, of course...
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Do you mean a room humidifier or one of those guitar humidifier gadgets?
If you have one of those guitar humidifiers, go ahead and use that instead of the baggies, but keep it in the case. If the crack closes up, you should be OK until you can get it your repair guy.
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04-27-2020, 03:02 PM #81joelf GuestOriginally Posted by bonnerj
You mean never take it out of the case, or leave it in after use?
Charlie Garnett - Franken Tele
Yesterday, 08:52 PM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos