absrec wrote:
I then crown, polish and string up the guitar only to be dissapointed by buzzing on the low E&A. Now... it's not the kind of buzzing where the tone is completely gone but it's enough to where I can hear it coming through the amplifier. Calling it buzz might not be fair. It's more like rattle. My preferred setup is a hair over 4/64 to a hair under 4/64 so I don't think that's unreasonable. I constantly hear people talk about relief but that concept has never made any sense to me. It seems to create more buzz/rattle or whatever you want to call it. Especially when playing over the apex of the truss rod (5th to 7th fret). The least buzz I can ever achieve seems to be with the neck dead straight or maybe .001"-.002" of relief.
"Buzzing on the Low E and A."
That's the issue! And something I've never seen anyone discuss in depth, or at all. The Low E and A strings need more relief than the other strings to have enough room to vibrate without crashing into the frets. Really glad to see this thread as I've had a similar frustration for years and never found a satisfactory answer.
I've played many guitars, including custom built guitars, that all have this issue to some extent or another. The problem is compounded by the fact that, on typical string sets, the Low E and A strings are lower tension than the rest of the strings.
When playing hard enough, some level of buzz on the Low E (more so than the A) is inevitable. One of the issues here is not being able to communicate sound via text -- I know exactly what you're talking about, and it isn't a dead fret or anything out of level. You do a perfect job, and everything is completely level, but it's still having this issue. As you said: more a rattle than a buzz.
It's one of the unspoken issues of guitar. The low tension of the low strings, and the big size that causes them to vibrate in a much wider arc, which makes them buzz far more easily than the other strings.
That's why your D, G, B and E strings all sound perfect when you leveled the whole board exactly the same way, but the Low E and A strings are buzzing. They're bigger, they're looser, and they vibrate in a much wider arc than the other strings.
This is why nowadays I carve relief into the frets themselves *only under the Low E and A strings,* so the Low E and A strings have more relief compared to the D, G, B and E strings.
Lately I've been using a Rectify Master Katana to do this. But before I owned one of those, I'd put the neck into a slight back bow and use a flat leveling beam *only* on the Low E and A string side. Then, when it's brought back to straight, the rest of the strings feel nice and low and comfortable, but the Low E and A have relief.
After over 15 years of doing repairs as well as compulsively working on my own guitars, and over 18 years of playing guitar every single day, I've also come to prefer necks that are dead straight, or .001" or .002" relief at the most. So I feel you there for sure! I not only find them easier and more enjoyable to play, but they seem to buzz less. There's someone else online who actually tested this and did seem to find that straight necks tended to have less buzz than necks with relief, all other things being equal.
My experience is that's true, and more so than that, the Low E and A are the only strings I ever have had issues with when it comes to buzz/rattle. Traditional fret leveling with the strings off, or leveling under tension with the strings on -- I've tried it all, and either method works great, but the Low E and A are stubborn and will be the only ones buzzing even when the other 4 strings are perfect with buttery low action. And that action feels perfect on the other strings!
The action and playability just feel phenomenal on the rest of the strings -- putting relief into the neck to relieve some of the buzzing on the Low E and A, at the expense of the playability of the rest of the strings, is a compromise. Not only that, but it doesn't help at all in my experience. One of the worst cases of this I ever saw was on a 7 string. The Low B string was rattling/buzzing like crazy and no amount of leveling was helping it at all. I ended up using a slightly heavier string, and carving some relief into the frets *only* under the Low B string. The customer was very happy. It wasn't perfect, but it reduced it from horrible, unplayable buzzing, to a rattle.
On a non-multi scale 7 string, you're just going to have issues with that Low B. The Low E is bad enough but 7 strings take that issue to a whole nother level.
Now: this may not solve the problem completely with my current method, which is not precise. I don't have this down to an exact science yet, and I haven't been setting the Katana to a specific amount of relief, or putting the neck into a specific degree of back bow before leveling. Nowadays I only use the Katana as I feel it's more accurate than backbowing and leveling, however read ahead:
My friend and mentor who's been in the biz since starting his career working for Dan Armstrong in 1969 started using this technique after I told him about it, and has had at least one major success: getting rid of Low E string buzz on a custom SG that had been PLEK'd. And he doesn't use a Katana or even a leveling beam. He uses Nicholson flat files. He put it in a slight backbow, just like I mentioned, leveled the frets, and when he strung the Low E back up to pitch, no buzz, no rattle. The customer was blown away and was so happy. He had paid a lot to have his guitar PLEK'd and was heartbroken when he had basically the same issue you describe here: Low E rattling/buzzing.
As an ending note, I did not come up with this idea myself, at least not completely. I was browsing online and found this guy in Denton, TX named "Big John." He doesn't reveal his secrets on his website, but that's where I first saw the argument about different strings needing different amounts of relief:
https://bigjohnsguitars.com/fretboard-contouring
"the radius stays the same down the length of the neck...the treble side of the neck gets a slight horizon or a hump the full length of the neck...the bass side gets this hump from the xxx to the xxx fret then drops slightly to a bowl shape with the highest point behind the xxx fret of the bass side.
When string tension is applied the hump becomes as straight as a laser beam and the bowl more pronounced.
This allows the lowest notes to breathe with the amount of relief they need, without raising the other notes off the neck!!"Now, I'm a big fan of understring leveling. Stewmac sells their Fret Bars which are knockoffs of the Rectify Master aluminum i-beams; either work great. The Katana is the next level, though I actually primarily use it for this particular technique instead of general leveling.
So leveling with the strings on, what Big John is describing would mean leveling the frets flat on the treble side as you normally would, but then adding relief to the Low string side. It sounds like he does this with the strings off -- I do it with the strings on, which I think has the potential to be even more accurate.
Anyway, food for thought for the super particular! Very glad to see this thread! I have a disability in my left hand and keep my action very, very low (below 3/64" on the treble side and at or slightly below 4/64" on the bass side, measured open at the 12th fret, with no neck relief or .002" at the most)...I also use an .008, .011, .015, .022, .030, .046.
The .046 definitely is more resistant to rattling than thinner strings, by the way, and I agree with the idea that 'progressive tension' feels best with strings (tension in pounds increasing slightly from high string to low string, as opposed to balanced tension, or random tension).
Anyway! I'm very happy with my guitars. Some amount of 'rattle' on the Low E and A is to be expected, especially with low action -- but in my experience, the fretwork is more important than the action. I've seen buzz and rattle plenty of times that was bad at 3/64" and wasjust as bad at 6/64" or even 7/64." I'm convinced specialized contouring of the frets needs to be done for the Low E string, and to a lesser extent the A. Going to a slightly heavier gauge on those strings does help as well.
Anyway, I've thought about this a lot over the many years I've been doing guitar work. Thrilled to see this thread. I'll continue developing my technique, but I will tell you that carving some relief into the frets *only* under the Low E/A is a huge step in the right direction, and has made a dramatic difference on my own guitars. Perfection may not be possible, but it's a heck of a lot closer to that now.
One last note: getting the rattle to where it's barely noticeable through an amp is fine. Playing acoustically it will always sound worse than amplified when you're close. Horrible buzz is horrible buzz, but there is a sweet spot where "good enough" gets the job done.
If I ever crack the code on this 100% I'll let you know! But my results lately have been better than ever and again, it's a *huge* improvement over traditional fretwork. Also kinda cool when you check the relief and see a nice gap on the Low E and A but the rest of the strings are dead straight!