Home Gear “That top nut is probably the most common problem with any lower-end mass-produced guitar”: Having problems with your shiny new guitar? Try these fixes first
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“That top nut is probably the most common problem with any lower-end mass-produced guitar”: Having problems with your shiny new guitar? Try these fixes first

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Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.

Tuning stability problems on new guitars rarely come from the tuners themselves, although many like to upgrade to locking types.(Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)

You’d hope that when you buy your shiny new guitar, it would be perfectly ready to go, especially since guitars aren’t getting any cheaper as we’ve all no doubt noticed. Over the past year, however, it’s fair to say rather too many new instruments aren’t quite finished when they turn up at Guitarist HQ.

Is that acceptable today? Do guitar companies think we should either spend our own time finishing off their guitars or pay a professional? Is the quality control of new guitars going down the pan?

Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.
On three-a-side headstocks the strings splay out from the nut to the tuners. This means that the D and G string slots especially have to be cut very carefully, otherwise they’ll snag the strings and you’ll be out of tune. (Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)
Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.
Another reason to love Mr Fender: the straight string-pull over the nut means you’ll have fewer problems, not least with a vibrato. (Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)
PRS SE Silver Sky
While we’ve had to work on plenty of review guitars, one brand that stands out is PRS. From its start-up SE models upwards, these models play and stay in tune and are consistently fit for purpose. Our reference SE Silver Sky is in daily use and, aside from string changes and the occasional polish, we haven’t touched it. (Image credit: Future / Neil Godwin)
Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.
You can check for straight string-pull over the nut by fretting each string at the 3rd fret. Look closely and there should be only the slightest gap from the top of the fret to the underside of the string. If the nut slots are too high, then as you fret at the 1st fret you’ll be sharp. But remember, only check this when the neck is properly set with just a little relief. (Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)
Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.
There are plenty of tricks to get a Strat-style vibrato to play in tune. PRS’s SE Silver Sky comes with the vibrato ‘decked’ flat to the body, as shown here, and there are no tuning problems. (Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)
Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.
Like a nut’s string grooves, those at the bridge need to be smooth and properly cut. It’s particularly important if your guitar has a vibrato as well. (Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)
Fixes to make if your new guitar doesn't sound right: from tuners to tremolo units, nuts and string trees, many new guitars need some TLC to make them sound at their best.
While one or two string trees might be necessary on a Fender-style headstock to increase the back angle and pull the top strings down, you need to check that they’re not snagging the strings. (Image credit: Future / Dave Burrluck)

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Dave Burrluck is one of the world’s most experienced guitar journalists, who started writing back in the ’80s for International Musician and Recording World, co-founded The Guitar Magazine and has been the Gear Reviews Editor of Guitarist magazine for the past two decades. Along the way, Dave has been the sole author of The PRS Guitar Book and The Player’s Guide to Guitar Maintenance as well as contributing to numerous other books on the electric guitar. Dave is an active gigging and recording musician and still finds time to make, repair and mod guitars, not least for Guitarist’s The Mod Squad.

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