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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Guitar Action And Tuning


Assuming that the guitar you are trying is tuned to concert pitch and this is essential, because only at this pitch will the strings possess the correct tension now is the time to check on Action and Tuning. Find the 21th fret by counting upwards along the neck on the 1st string. Unless the guitar you are trying is a Spanish guitar there should be a position dot, or dots at this fret to guide you. When you have found it, press the 1st string down onto the fingerboard just behind the fret and hit the string with your Right thumb or plectrum.
Then take your Left hand finger off and play the open string. The two notes should form a perfect Octave. If they don't, either the bridge of the instrument is our position, or the Action is too high.
Action is the word used in describing the amount of forced needed to press the strings down behind the frets. Thus we speak of a high or a low Action, according to the height of the strings above the fingerboard. It will be obvious to you that the higher they are initially, the more effort is needed to press them down firmly behind the frets.
Generally speaking the strings should not be more than a quarter of an inch away from the fingerboard at the 12th fret, and they are in some cases quite a bit nearer than that. Just how near they can be is a complicated formula referring to bridge height, neck pitch and fingerboard straightness understood only by alchemists like my guitarrero friends James and Michael. As a mere player I take these mysteries on trust and leave them to the experts.
At the beginning your fingertips are sure to be soft, and when they start to get sore (as they will!) yo're going to think that a quarter of an inch Action at the 12th fret is pretty high. The only certain consolation I can offer here is that the soreness will wear off in time, if you keep on playing, because your finger ends will grow their own protective coating. I stress the phrase keep on playing because at one stage I didn't touch a guitar for over a years, and when I came back to it I found that although I hadn't quite forgotten how to play, I had to go through the uncomfortable business of thoughening up my finger ends all over again.

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