- Set-in neck
Set-in neck is a method of
guitar (or similar stringed instrument) construction that involves joining guitar neck and body, pressing them tightly together using some sort ofadhesive . It is a common belief that this yields a stronger body-to-neck connection than abolt-on neck , although most luthiers agree that a well-executed bolt-on neck joint is equally as strong, and will have similar levels of sustain and neck-to-body contact. However, neither of these joints is as strong as aneck-through body joint, which is a labor- and material-intensive undertaking and is usually seen only on high-end offerings.This method is most popular on acoustic guitars. Almost all major acoustic guitar manufacturers use set-in necks, with only notable exception being
Taylor Guitars . In theelectric guitar market, Gibson traditionally produces almost all of its electric offerings as set-in neck models, as opposed to rival Fender, which traditionally builds its electric instruments (most notably, theStratocaster ,Telecaster and various Electric Basses) with bolt-on necks.Glues used
Wooden musical instrument construction relies on four widely used types of glues:
*
Hide glue
* PVA (both "white glue" and "yellow glue")
*Epoxy andCyanoacrylate are sometimes also used for neck joints, but generally such use is rare. Structure of these glues makes it difficult to disassemble joint later if repair or servicing is required.Advantages
Typically cited advantages of set-in neck include:
* Warmer tone
* More sustain, although this is not supported by formal researchcite journal
last = Mottola
first = R.M.
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Sustain and Electric Guitar Neck Joint Type
journal = American Lutherie
volume =
issue = 91
pages = 52
date = Fall 2007
url =
doi =
id =
accessdate = ]
* Usually better access to top frets in comparsion to bolt-on necks utilizing a metal plate (as seen on Fender guitars)Disadvantages
* Slightly harder to mass manufacture than bolt-on necks, much harder to repair / service than a bolt-on neck
* The player has no control over the neck-to-body angle; changing it requires disassembling the instrument and re-glueing the neck by an experiencedluthier References
* [http://www.frets.com/FRETSPages/Luthier/Data/Materials/gluechart.html Glue comparison chart] on frets.com
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