How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

How-to's, info, thoughts, and musings directly from the Fly-est Parker
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Ken Parker
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How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by Ken Parker »

The Problem:
“The truss rod in this particular guitar barely works; there's more relief in this neck than I'm comfortable with.”
For most of our production years, Basswood was the only material used for the necks, and later, we added Mahogany from Central America.

One giant goal was to try to do a “forever” fret job with brutally tough and hard fretwire, which we mostly, eventually kinda pulled off. Very Arrogant became Very Humble.

Is the rod adjusted with an Allen key? That was the early version, and we quickly switched to torx for reliability, as the Allen heads could strip, and weren’t fun to replace. Plus, the way I designed it, there was only room for a weird-shaped little thrust washer, and it was bearing on end grain Basswood, which isn’t superior in compression, to say the least.

On the side of the neck’s stability, though, I can say that very likely whatever it has done by now is likely to stay that way, as a result to the epoxy/glass/carbon skin, they really don’t twist, and no creep at all. The problem with the early ones was that the recipe wasn’t fully developed, and those early shop tolerances were much wider than they came to be later on.

Having said all that, if the neck has too much relief, the way to optimize the rod adjustment it to:
  • Loosen the strings
  • loosen the rod nut
  • apply a drop of oil,
  • clamp or flex the neck backwards over a neck block to induce a giant backbow
  • carefully tighten as much as you dare without making any crushing noises
  • then retune, and see if you’re closer to what you’d hope to expect.
I know, it’s a bit of a mess, but the only other remedy could only be accomplished by angels in heaven. Shame on me. Also, the frets can be dressed, just go slow with sharp files or paper, and don’t get things hot.
”Can the nut be removed and washers added to gain more thread?”
Simple answer, no, it wouldn’t work that way. The rod is .078” music wire with 41-40 (semi tool steel) swaged ends. 

This truss rod was very complicated and expensive to make and install, but had the benefit of weighing 1/6 of a normal ‪3/16‬ inch mild steel truss rod.

I would be surprised if it was out of adjustment range; on those early guitars we used, as it turned out, a LOT more carbon fiber than we needed on the back of the neck. One result of this was that the truss rod had a terrible time shortening the length of the back of the neck because it was way too strong in compression. If that’s the case, I don’t know if there is any real remedy to this, except for removing fret top material.

Over tightening the rod will eventually caused terrible damage at the headstock end of the neck as the washer crushes the basswood and it’s pretty awful.

#TrussIssues
"It's not me that designed the Fly guitar, it was all of you guys." - Ken Parker
Mr303
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by Mr303 »

Thanks Ken
I really enjoy reading technical stuff and that’s a lot of good info.
During “isolation” from foot surgery in March I got caught up on back issues of scientific American so things like this are right up my alley.
Cheers!
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vjmanzo
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Fly Truss Wire/Rod X-Rays

Post by vjmanzo »

I found some old photos of X-Rays of a Fly from the old forum, and thought I’d share them in this related thread for posterity’s sake:
A7BAA123-4711-47E4-B298-3C047448065B.jpeg
252AA00A-8FB0-4722-9713-E711CDE834E9.jpeg
486F6DE4-4F4C-4BA7-85B1-7F14527CA7E4.jpeg
8EE10937-CF40-4574-948A-E263E967FB22.jpeg
1D36358D-E9C4-459F-8067-6C55F7355B01.jpeg
#TrussIssues
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Laughinglarry
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by Laughinglarry »

VERY cool, VJ - thanks!
Owner since '98, ADDICT since '08
That would be a SWARM...
Musikron
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by Musikron »

I have literally been planning on having my chiropractor x ray my fly. Guess I wasn't the only one.
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by vjmanzo »

Thanks, @Musikron and @Laughinglarry—I agree that X-rays like that are very useful!

There’s not much to talk about now, but I have a team that’s been working on an effort that @Ken Parker dubbed “Fretology”: http://Fretology.org

XRays are helpful to look at, but the scale is always off, so, unfortunately you can’t really get accurate dimensions of the things you’re seeing. We’ve had some success with CT Scans, however! Here’s a photo of my friend John Thomas’ 1945 Gibson LG-3 going through a CT Scan:
4270F2BD-5752-4ECD-907E-3553163BA6EF.jpeg
The models that come out through a CT scan are huge, and very detailed! You can actually move through the various “layers” of the instrument as well to, for example, zip through the finish into the woodgrain or through the entire top altogether to look at the bracing. Very cool!

We’re working now to see potential workflows for making the data more useful for builders (potentially leading to the generation of machinable parts or clones!) and also to get a sense of what aspects of this data would be most useful and helpful for builders.

I’ve also been wondering about how scanning a Fly might be useful for us to have—obviously being able to see the bracing of some old acoustic provides info that is otherwise difficult to understand, but might there be things about the Fly (or other solid body electric guitars) that would be appealing for you/others to observe as a complete 3D model?

No obligation, but if anyone would be interested/available to give the student team currently working on this a sense of how this data might be useful to you, (in the next few weeks only), please feel free to reach out to them by emailing gr-fretology-iqp-e-2022@wpi.edu and letting them know a bit about your interest.
JMStaehli.com
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by JMStaehli.com »

I will drop you a little secret tip of mine about stuck Iron things, (rusted) threads, rods, nuts and bolts.

I worked in the commercial restarant appliance repair business for many years and had to make things happen with repairs fast and sometimes using what was found handy in the kitchen. A potato (for instance) shoved into a low-pressure and (quickly) opened natural gas line feeding a pizza oven will work to plug the pipe while I move the coupler fitting to the replacement new control valve to finish the work. There was no individual gas shut-off valve for an array of six ovens that can not all be shut down through a work-day lunch.

And an electric grill plate with a bunch of elements clamped under it side-by-side covering the whole underside of it. And a single threaded rod for each cluster welded on the back of the grill. God forbid you twist the nut and break one of them off trying to remove a rusted nut after the years of condensation under the griddle has rusted everything solid.

Now "Rust-Buster" products all have petrolium or oil in them and squirting it UP from the can is hard to do. Also they smoke like crazy and smell when the griddle is turned on again. Not something you want durring lunch in a restaurant at mid-day. Also to my experience those products don't work worth crap.

So on a thought I tried something else. I sprayed the nut and stud with Windex glass cleaner (with Ammonia 'D' (diluted)). It seems ammonia has these three hydrogen molecules, and rust (Iron Oxid) has these three oxygen molecules. They combine to make Hydrogen-Peroxide. Instantly.

Spray a little ammonia (Windex) on a rusted nut and tap smartly & lightly, once, to make some vibration so it penatrates, and it will break loose and unscrew with little more than your fingers. This has worked for me on rusted bolts/nuts as big as 1 inch in diameter. Doesn't seem to matter the size. It's chemestry.

And Coka-Cola desolves roofing tar. :)
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by vjmanzo »

A lifetime of experience informed that last post, @JMStaehli.com! Thanks!!!!
chrisandrews
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Re: How to Fix a Truss Rod That Won’t Move

Post by chrisandrews »

Sorry to blow open an old thread.

@Ken Parker Hope your well,

Do you know what the truss rod thread size of a U.S Nitefly was on the adjuster end?

Would these truss rod adjusters fit the Korean P38 truss rods? I have a feeling it wont due to imperial & metric sizing but thought i would ask as unable to measure threads.

Thank you for your help
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