NGD: Surf Green Dano U2
Moderated By: mods
NGD: Surf Green Dano U2
90s Dano U2 reissue. May still be in the honey moon phase, but this may be my best sounding guitar. The lipsticks are great. It needs sight truss rod adjustment but hoping that is on the heel of the neck...
I'm the proud owner of a black 90s reissue U2. I love it. It's battered to fuck. And it still sounds great and I love the feel. It actually messed me up a bit because the fretboards are so flat and everything else so simple that it made other guitars feel odd. I leave it at Jasmines now so I have a guitar to play when I go round so I only see it every week or so, but whenever I pick it up to play it feels so fucking easy.
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Brandon W wrote:you elites.
- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
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- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:29 pm
- Location: Overland Park, KS, USA
Upon further playing:
The poorly designed bridge is 'collapsed' as all dano bridges of this era do. The strings are lower in the middle and fret out on higher frets. I'm looking at a site that machines bridges with tele saddles and look like Duo bridges to put on. Hopefully this willl remedy the tuning issues I've been having. I am also dubious of the metal nut for tuning, as this thing has been going out pretty frequently. Other than that it is sweet. Won't be changing the pickups. May swap out the switch as it is LOOSE.
The poorly designed bridge is 'collapsed' as all dano bridges of this era do. The strings are lower in the middle and fret out on higher frets. I'm looking at a site that machines bridges with tele saddles and look like Duo bridges to put on. Hopefully this willl remedy the tuning issues I've been having. I am also dubious of the metal nut for tuning, as this thing has been going out pretty frequently. Other than that it is sweet. Won't be changing the pickups. May swap out the switch as it is LOOSE.
- timhulio
- Redheaded Stepchild
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You can buy the metal saddled adjustable bridge found on the 90s U3 and DC3 here:
http://danguitars.com/PARTS.html
http://danguitars.com/PARTS.html
I was looking at that but read even those cave in under pressure in a couple of yearstimhulio wrote:You can buy the metal saddled adjustable bridge found on the 90s U3 and DC3 here:
http://danguitars.com/PARTS.html
YES, this is an issue and has happened to mine as well. Although a few years back I had my friend make a new wooden saddle to compensate for the collapsey bridge so it's not an issue so much.
I've been looking at alternatives but almost all of them involve changing the guitar quite radically. One option is for a Les Paul-type bridge, maybe a short-archtop-style tailpiece, but that would also necessitate neck shims. Unless you go the route Dano went with their unofficial Jimmy Page signature with the wraparound bridge which actually had a long rectangular recess routed into the guitar for the bridge to sit lower. It was quite neat but it would be a fair bit of work to do yourself, not to mention necessitate some sort of refinish around that area.
I've been looking at alternatives but almost all of them involve changing the guitar quite radically. One option is for a Les Paul-type bridge, maybe a short-archtop-style tailpiece, but that would also necessitate neck shims. Unless you go the route Dano went with their unofficial Jimmy Page signature with the wraparound bridge which actually had a long rectangular recess routed into the guitar for the bridge to sit lower. It was quite neat but it would be a fair bit of work to do yourself, not to mention necessitate some sort of refinish around that area.
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Brandon W wrote:you elites.
They're just a slab of trapezoidal metal which rests on two points at the wider front edge and is anchored by a single large screw in the middle of the short edge. The strings are anchored in cutouts on the short edge and pass over the wooden saddle near the middle. The pressure exerted by the strings on the wider edge eventually causes the whole piece to bow significantly in the middle. It isn't uniform; some bow more than others for whatever reason, but it's a pretty major curve eventually.
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Brandon W wrote:you elites.
Those are slightly different, I'm sure the folded section at the back would give it more resistance. But it's probably the quality of the metal, too. The chrome plating looks scrappy as fuck and if the metal is poor then the ten+ years I've been loading this thing with 11s and 12s tuned to E are going to have taken their toll.timhulio wrote:Like this? Those Danelectro bridges are fine. They don't bend over time or anything. The only thing that'd bend it is a hammer.
I'll try and take a picture next time I'm at Jasmines.
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Brandon W wrote:you elites.
No, you daft ha'porth, the caving people are on about is when the top of the guitar itself bows inwards, like you see on old (usually cheaper) acoustics. None of the reissue Danos are old enough for this to happen. Doesn't even happen on the old ones that often.
One of the guitar-things that gives me greatest regret is my not buying Danelectros any more, post-hate. They've even done a MIK baritone reissue lately...
One of the guitar-things that gives me greatest regret is my not buying Danelectros any more, post-hate. They've even done a MIK baritone reissue lately...