Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

  1. #1

    Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

    Hello
    Do you know how many millimeters would be between the pickups and the strings?
    Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

  2. #2
    Forum Member OldStrummer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2016
    Location
    Northern Virginia, USA
    Posts
    4,030

    Re: Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

    This, from Fender site (https://support.fender.com/en-us/knowledgebase/article/KA-02007). You'll have to convert inches to metric:

    ELECTRIC GUITAR

    Neck Radius Relief (at 8th fret) String height (at 17th fret) Bass side Treble side
    7.25" .012" 5/64" 4/64"
    9.5" to 12" .010" 4/64" 4/64"
    15" to 17" .008" 4/64" 3/64"

    Striving to be ordinary

    Proud to be a TFF Dumbass!

  3. #3
    Forum Member Don's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Massachusetts
    Posts
    11,295

    Re: Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

    Quote Originally Posted by OldStrummer View Post
    This, from Fender site (https://support.fender.com/en-us/knowledgebase/article/KA-02007). You'll have to convert inches to metric:

    ELECTRIC GUITAR

    Neck Radius Relief (at 8th fret) String height (at 17th fret) Bass side Treble side
    7.25" .012" 5/64" 4/64"
    9.5" to 12" .010" 4/64" 4/64"
    15" to 17" .008" 4/64" 3/64"

    This chart is showing string height over the 12th fret, not pickup height (though it's formatted incorrectly).

  4. #4
    Forum Member Don's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Massachusetts
    Posts
    11,295

    Re: Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

    This is from that link and is also formatted pretty poorly, but may be helpful. It'll still have to be converted to metric.

    I'd go with the "Vintage Style" settings. These are not carved in stone- you have to play it by ear, not a ruler.

    Pickup Height Adjustments

    Electric Guitar Bass side Treble side
    Texas Specials 8/64" 6/64"
    Vintage style 6/64" 5/64"
    American/Mexican Std. 5/64" 4/64"
    Humbuckers 4/64" 4/64"
    Lace Sensors As close as desired (Allowing for string vibration)

    Bass Guitar Bass side Treble side
    Vintage style 8/64" 6/64"
    American/Mexican Std. 6/64" 5/64"
    Lace Sensors As close as desired (Allowing for string vibration)

  5. #5

    Re: Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

    Quote Originally Posted by Don View Post
    This is from that link and is also formatted pretty poorly, but may be helpful. It'll still have to be converted to metric.

    I'd go with the "Vintage Style" settings. These are not carved in stone- you have to play it by ear, not a ruler.

    Pickup Height Adjustments

    Electric Guitar Bass side Treble side
    Texas Specials 8/64" 6/64"
    Vintage style 6/64" 5/64"
    American/Mexican Std. 5/64" 4/64"
    Humbuckers 4/64" 4/64"
    Lace Sensors As close as desired (Allowing for string vibration)

    Bass Guitar Bass side Treble side
    Vintage style 8/64" 6/64"
    American/Mexican Std. 6/64" 5/64"
    Lace Sensors As close as desired (Allowing for string vibration)
    Thank you for your help!

  6. #6
    Forum Member Offshore Angler's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    New York Finger Lakes Area
    Posts
    8,514

    Re: Height of Fender Custom Shop '51 Nocaster Telecaster Pickup

    You need to do it by ear. Start low and then slowly bring them up until they either start to lose definition or create wolf tones.

    The factory recommendations are only a starting point. Every player needs to adjust them to suit their particular playing style. As in someone who strum chords with a thin pick will require a different setup than someone who plays hard leads with a thick pick. A hybrid picker might want something else.

    It also depends on how hard you want to hit the front end of the amp and how much you want things to clean up when you roll off the volume.

    Just use your ears and when you hit the sweet spot - you'll know.

    A really good way to start is set the guitar volume to about 3/4 and the tone to about 1/2. Raise as far as you can while keeping the sound clean. Then, open the volume up and see if you can overdrive the amp. Next open the tone up more and it should get even fatter and retain the cut. That's pretty much the sweet spot.



    Chuck
    "No harmonic knowledge, no sense of time, a ghastly tone, unskilled vibrato, and so on. Chuck is one of the worst guitar players I know" -Gravity Jim

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •