Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

StrangeDay

New member
For my Telecaster project, I really want to put in a Tune-o-matic bridge. But now I'm wondering if the tune-o-matic bridge would intonate correctly with the bolt on neck. Aren't most tune-o-matic bridges placed on set-neck guitars?!! I would imagine that those necks would be angled differently than that of a Standard Fender. What do you say?!! :dammit:
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

StrangeDay said:
I would imagine that those necks would be angled differently than that of a Standard Fender.
That's the only problem I can think of, you'd have to maybe put a couple of shims in the neck pocket (IIRC it's only a matter of a couple of degrees, angle-wise).

Other than that it should be fine.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

It will not be a problem. The neck will have to be angled. You can either do this with shims or if you are building the body, rout the neck pocket with an angle built in.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

A TOM bridge can be applied to bolt-on necks as well.

StrangeDay said:
I would imagine that those necks would be angled differently than that of a Standard Fender. What do you say?!! :dammit:


Most definitely, yes. A TOM-STP bridge is relatively high so it comes with a back-angled neck. There are different angles, as far as I know the typical range is from 10 to 15 degrees, depending on construction.

Shims usually work o.k. but in many cases using them mean some tone loss so I'd recommend a proper neck pocket routing.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

Godin puts tune-o-matic style bridges on some of their bolt-on LG and LGX guitars, and they just recess the bridge into the body instead of angling the neck with shims or an angled neck pocket.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

The stop-tail Peavey Wolfgang models are bolt-ons with a TOM bridge. I'm pretty sure they angle the neck pocket. I asked Warmoth about this once, they told me that a TOM bridge requires a 10 degree angle in the neck pocket.

Ryan
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

A Gibson style TOM has a flatter radius than a vintage Tele or Strat and the individual string ht. is not adjustable. This means that if your Tele has a vintage fingerboard radius the middle four strings, and especially the D & G strings, might be to close the fretboard. Maybe not though...depends on your guitar. Lew
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

also, the bridge pickup will have to be raised a lot to be of proper height. that might not work depending on how your pups are mounted (there might not be enough adjustment room).
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

instead of angling my neck i recessed the tom into the body by about 0.25", its a cool custom look too
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

Thanks, everyone!!

But, what if I don't use the bushings, and just screw the TOM bridge directly onto the guitar body?! Is that a crazy idea?!! It would have a lot lower of a profile.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

jeremy said:
instead of angling my neck i recessed the tom into the body by about 0.25", its a cool custom look too


This is how all of my guitars will be from now on (when I start building in 100 years :wink: ). I love the design of the Godin's. I just like the feel of the TOM combined with the bolt-on design. Best of both worlds.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

Both Dean and Ibanez have bolt on models that use a tunomatic bridge.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

i'd try to find a roller saddle TOM with a bigsby. the regular seems to stick a bit sometimes.

I've got a bigsby and TOM on my musicmaster (bolt on) and the stickiness seems to be a problem. it's not so bad though.

But i'm going to try and recess it like mentioned, that seems like a good idea

ps that john 5 tele is frickin sweet
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

RushOfBlood said:
i'd try to find a roller saddle TOM with a bigsby. the regular seems to stick a bit sometimes.

I've got a bigsby and TOM on my musicmaster (bolt on) and the stickiness seems to be a problem. it's not so bad though.
What do you mean by "stickiness?"
Pics? :33:
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

i was gonna suggest recessing the bushings, it looks really cool and its probably easier than shimming, that could take long time to get right.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

StrangeDay said:
What do you mean by "stickiness?"
Pics? :33:
i mean that sometimes it seems like the strings get 'caught up' in the saddles when using the tremolo. it's kind of a weird thing, it's a similar feeling/effect to having nut slots that are too small.

this is what it would look like without a shim or recessment. note the string angle at the higher register of the frets. it's pretty high.

Picture001.jpg

Picture002.jpg

Picture003.jpg

Picture005.jpg
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

jeremy said:
instead of angling my neck i recessed the tom into the body by about 0.25", its a cool custom look too
I would have to say that sounds like a very interesting idea Jeremy. Thank you for the tip.
 
Re: Are Tune-o-matic bridges made for Set-Necks only?!!

G&L, built a limited run of Asat's with TOM bridges. They were called the Asat Jr.


Sprinter
 
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