Measurements!

Hi everybody. about to start doing the neck for my first cbg this week.

was planning on using this fretscale found on another cigarbox guitar site.
http://cigarboxguitars.com/workshops/24_5_Guitar_Fretboard_Scale.php

it measures 24.5 inches.

What measurements should i use on the body/box. From last fret to Bridge?
noticed that some of you add about one inch(?) to the neck after the last fret?

Any hints and tips my friends?

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Replies

  • Number one is correct, this is the point were the string stops touching the nut. If it were a normal square edged nut it would be the edge but on the round bolt nut its the top of the radius. I like using the treaded bolt for nuts, they never buzz and the spacing is adjustable and if you make a 3 string and want to change it to 4 string you don't need to mess with the nut, its almost foolproof. Nice illustration by the way, if you add right and wrong to it it would be helpful to other new builders.
    rockinfrasse said:
    Hi everyone. was working with the neck for my first CBG.


    Was planning to use a brass bolt for nut. One question popped up...


    Measuring from the nut to fret. Is "Number one" or
    "Number two" the right way to measure?

    (I would think "Number one" right(?), beacause the strings would land on top of the bolt.)

    Hope someone understands and can help me.

  • The answer is "1." Measure from where the string begins to vibrate.
  • Hi everyone. was working with the neck for my first CBG. Was planning to use a brass
    bolt for nut. One question popped up... Measuring from the nut to fret. Is
    "Number one" or
    "Number two" the right way to measure? (I would think "Number one" right(?), beacause the strings would land on top of the bolt.) Hope someone understands and can help me.

  • If it was me, I would go with the wider one, but that's only a personal preference, because I'm not much of a player and find the wider spacing easier for me. Also on my 4 string builds so far, I haven't used truss-rods, so I figured the thicker the necks, the less chance of them bending under the string tension. So far, so good! That bridge placement should be fine, I reckon.

    rockinfrasse said:
    Saying i should use the wider then, its about 41 mm. Compared this with my classic acoustic guitar, should give me the same spacing as that. About the bridge, was planning to place it somewhat 1/4 of the box in from the tale sounds alright?

    Checked out your guitars, looked great!
  • The "almost" part of intonation is due to the different string gauges' makeup - windings, plain, or so on - not sounding exactly an octave at the 12th fret. A string at a pitch will sound sharp at the 12th with an equidistant nut-to-12th-fret/12th-fret-to-bridge measurement. "How much" is action and other variables; "cut and try" works best. There's a lot of physics and acoustics going on, but generally the bridge will be a little (varies) closer to the butt end of the instrument. That's the Material World for you. It's maybe fussier than you might feel like tackling first time out, which is fine, but in the future it'll pay off.

    But yeah, a "24.5" scale" means the nut-to-bridge distance is 24.5"; 12.25"then would be as good as the 12th fret position. Good luck.
  • yes thanks
  • rockinfrasse said:
    Didnt understand all of that James, isnt that right? a 24.5 inch scale is 24.5 from nut to bridge?? (give or take some for intonation)

    What James is saying is that the 12th fret should be (almost) exactly halfway between nut and bridge. If you press the string down on the 12th fret, you should go up exactly one octave. The distance need not be precise; in fact, if you look at the saddles on acoustic guitars you'll see that they are at a slight angle. On an electric guitar, you'll see that each string is adjusted differently. On a first build, this is probably not worth worrying about.

    Does that help?
  • Didnt understand all of that James, isnt that right? a 24.5 inch scale is 24.5 from nut to bridge?? (give or take some for intonation)
  • << The length of the scale is from the nut to the bridge, that is your 24.5 inch length >>

    Add to that the distance from the nut to the 12th fret is the same distance (give or take a little, for intonation) from the 12th fret to the bridge - that's where the octave lives, the 12th fret. Use a tuner during setup; if an open G is the same as a g at the 12th, say, you're good. If all's well otherwise, the fifths, harmonics, string-to-string tuning and so on should be right on - or certainly close enough. You can fudge a floating bridge around to make it "just nice" intonation-wise; fixed bridges take a little more thought up-front, but nothing's impossible.
  • Saying i should use the wider then, its about 41 mm. Compared this with my classic acoustic guitar, should give me the same spacing as that. About the bridge, was planning to place it somewhat 1/4 of the box in from the tale sounds alright?

    Checked out your guitars, looked great!
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