Wilkinson VS100 Bridge (Too High?)

Voodoogumbo

New member
Hi Everyone. I just got my axe back from a setup (GREAT shop; I love their work) and it seems like the bridge is too high. This is on a Classic 50s body with a Fender MX "modern" neck that is currently for sale on Fender.com. The action is incredible, but it seems like the neck may be too high in the pocket, and the tech compensated at the bridge. A. Does this look "off" to you? B. Is the potential solution to shave the neck pocket down, so the neck fits a little deeper in the pocket?

Thoughts?

Edit: there's about 8/64ths space between the body and bottom of the bridge plate.
 

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Looks like you might want to try putting a shim under the neck to see if you can get it at a better angle this allowing you to lower the bridge some.
 
Yes, the bridge should be level with the top. I wouldn't mess with the neck angle until the bridge is at the right angle , even and parallel with the top of the body.
 
Yeah - at a glance, I'm not thinking these guys "do great work"

That said - got the action fine. I would ask - does it work for you? I see no pull on the treble, but yes on the bass.

I mean - there is no "height" setting for a trem. Just where it needs to be. If the action is good, the pickups good and it moves like you want it is fine.

I don't think that's fine.
 
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That looks wrong. The height of the bridge doesn't really matter, it can go up and down based on where the neck and action need it to be . . . but the fact that the bass side is so much higher than the treble side is bizarre. It should be parallel with the guitar body.
 
Saddles are specifically made to be height adjustable to compensate for small amounts of neck angles. I don't think it looks bad enough to put a shim under the neck yet...it may be necessary, but see if it works for you the way it is...you say that the action is incredible, right. Depending on how you like your bridge action (full floating, amount of downward and upward action), you may want to adjust its angle and the heights of the saddles.
 
It looks like the tech mounted the bridge that way because the neck may not be seating in the pocket so that the fretboard is parallel to the face of the guitar. If this is in fact the case, it may be prudent to check the neck pocket and/or the heal of the neck.
 
Looks like you might want to try putting a shim under the neck to see if you can get it at a better angle this allowing you to lower the bridge some.

How is that going to lower the bridge? You're raising the neck up closer to the strings. Meaning the strings now need to go up as well. So, the bridge would go higher. Not lower?
 
Yes, the bridge should be level with the top. I wouldn't mess with the neck angle until the bridge is at the right angle , even and parallel with the top of the body.


It looks level with the top to me? What, isn't level is the saddles. Thr bridge plate itself is parallel to the body. It's clear as day in the pic?
 

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It looks level with the top to me? What, isn't level is the saddles. Thr bridge plate itself is parallel to the body. It's clear as day in the pic?

It's not level this way:

fetch
 
Yeah - neck shim on the treble side would be one answer, then the tech would raise the treble side of the bridge to parallel, the action stays fine and everyone is happy.

More extreme answers are sanding the neck or the pocket...

But as mentioned, if this works for you, and you are not a big trem user. Playon...
 
Logical first step would be to level the bridge and readjust the saddles.
Unless, as mentioned upthread, the fretboard is canted in relation to the body.
 
Twisted/warped neck or something going on at the pocket

The fact that the bass side of the plate needs to be adjusted that much higher than the treble side and the saddles still raised to near-max is not typical.

With a plate angle like that (viewed from the rear...first pic), you'll wear down the knife edges/pivot points much faster and may run into other issues with tuning stability, smoothness of the trem, etc. as you use it.

Your tech should've raised the plate on the treble side and compensated by lowering the saddle height on that side. Looks like he tried to keep all of the saddles the same height and adjusted action via the baseplate instead
 
Twisted/warped neck or something going on at the pocket

It is not! You think maybe the tech might have noticed a warped neck?

The guy did NOT know how to setup a vibrato - PERIOD! He set the saddles first, and then adjusted the height of the bridge using the studs - the exact opposite of the correct method.
 
we dont actually know anything about what he did, other than that is 100% not what i want. totally possible the neck has a twist or a bunch of other things, but thats a crap way to setup a trem
 
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