Truss rod trouble!
Posted: Sun Nov 24, 2013 6:36 pm
Well, here I am moving backwards again, guess I moved into celebration mode too quick yesterday after getting the neck fit on my second electric finally. I was all set to do my final fit on the angle at the heel and decided to straighten out the neck first with the truss rod. I but a block under the nut end of the neck and used a c clamp in the middle to pre-bend the neck straight so the truss rod, (double action hot rod) wouldn't be doing all of the work. Gave it a turn in one direction and could tell it was fighting me so I went the other way and instead of being easy, I heard a little tearing noise and watched as the fret board popped up a hair at the nut end. So, I want to do it right and wasn't going to just try and squeeze some glue in since this is a stress joint, and since I had to reglue the fret board on my first I wasn't too skeered so I set to peel that baby off and reglue it. When I did the first glue up I used a good amount of silicone at both ends of the truss rod, oh and one more detail: I was a little off on my truss rod channel width so I had shimmed the sides at the nuts to get a tight fit, I'd made sure that the truss rod was functioning properly before I closed it up, I ran a piece of 3/4" masking tape over the channel and got a good amount of titebond one on there. Clamped it up, left it clamped for several hours and then that was over two weeks ago.
So now I have the fret board off, I feel like I did everything right but the silicone is still wet in the channel and I've had an obvious failure. What can I do to make sure this won't happen again? Should I try epoxy at the nuts? The fret board is ziricote, should I treat the surface with something before I glue it back up? I'm a little reluctant to do anything just yet, I want to make sure I get the strongest set up possible. I've cleaned as much silicone out of the channel as I can, I've scraped the neck surface and the fret board of all old glue and waiting before I do anything else!
So now I have the fret board off, I feel like I did everything right but the silicone is still wet in the channel and I've had an obvious failure. What can I do to make sure this won't happen again? Should I try epoxy at the nuts? The fret board is ziricote, should I treat the surface with something before I glue it back up? I'm a little reluctant to do anything just yet, I want to make sure I get the strongest set up possible. I've cleaned as much silicone out of the channel as I can, I've scraped the neck surface and the fret board of all old glue and waiting before I do anything else!