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... On Mar 15, 10:48 am, Tim wrote: Probably not, Don. But then again, I've never seen much future or need in lobbing beefsteak tomatos. Don White wrote: "Tim" wrote in message ... No, I've enver been hit by a 67 mph tomatoe. as far as throwing faster w/out dislocating my shoulddr, heck yes. I used to throw in the 90's in a church league baseball team, till I crushed my wrist in an unrelated accident 10 yrs ago. Haven't played since. I can still throw a ball, but not w/ any accuracy. You've never seen the size of our tomatoes. No comparison to a puny baseball.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey, geetar players.. wish me luck. Today I am going to try to set up the intonation on my schaller roller bridge. New strings the other day, just read about how to do it on another group. Sounds easier than I thought. Going to tune on the 5th and 17th frets to start. I will let you know how it goes ![]() ========================== If you wanna be anal about it, check out this bit of detail: Fig. 8 Kinked strings are difficult to intonate, so you'll want to keep them from kinking in front of the exact "takeoff" point needed for good intonation. Before installing new strings, move the bridge saddles farther back than where they'll be after the intonation is set. Once the action is comfortable, adjust the saddles forward (toward the neck). This Musicmaster has a short scale length of 30". (The scale length is twice the distance from the nut's front edge to the 12th fret, in this case 15".) To correctly intonate an electric bass, you'll need to compensate the scale-length measurement by as much as q", as this allows for the distance a string is depressed when you fret a note. Adjust the bridge saddles so that all of their peaks are just a bit farther back than the adjusted measurement (slightly more than 30q" in this case). To move a spring-loaded saddle, don't simply tighten the length-adjusting screw-push the saddle backward to relieve the pressure, and then tighten the screw. The bridge saddles will be slightly farther back than you want (and the intonation on fretted notes will be flat), but you'll be moving them forward when you perform the final intonation. That will leave any possible string kinks behind, not in front of, the saddle peaks. |
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