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Locality: Albany, Georgia

Phone: +1 229-352-1518



Address: 404 N Westover Blvd 31707 Albany, GA, US

Likes: 57

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Rose Guitars 23.04.2021

Not my guitar, not my sale ad. You never know if that guitar sale is worth its asking price. This one is much valuable with duct tape on it, as you can see. Throw in a broken string and it’s good as gold.

Rose Guitars 19.04.2021

https://youtu.be/jU_p-6RfbbU

Rose Guitars 01.04.2021

Warmoth SRV compound 10-16 neck with walnut truss rod access point and large CBS fender headstock. Fender custom shop 69 pickups, tone bridge pickup mod, cloth wiring and oil caps. Gold switch tip. Fender deluxe ash body honey blonde finish, gold whammy bar, gold strap locks. 9.5/10 Will sell parts or the whole guitar with a hardshell case. Message if interested.

Rose Guitars 26.03.2021

What’s the buzz with guitars? Here, I will talk about an often overlooked problem with your guitar and buzz. If your guitar buzzes, most of the time, a simple loosening of the truss rod is all it needs to bring it back to good order. Other times, you may have to adjust the bridge as well. If that doesn’t fix it, it’s then time to look at the frets and the neck itself and how it fits into the body. From this point, the majority of guitars are buzz free. Once the neck is set ...properly (if needed), and the frets leveled, you guitar will be good to go. But what if... what if it still buzzes? All the hardware is fastened, the neck isn’t warped, frets are level, and the action might be quite high but still buzzing. That’s enough to make most techs and enthusiasts to throw up the white towel in defeat. But the problem has got to be caused by something! The problem is overlooked because the cause is something you never actually see. The truss rod in your neck can cause it! This is called sympathetic resonance. You ever been in a jam session with your band/friends, and hit a note on your guitar, usually an A, and hear the snare drum start rattling? That snare drum is sympathetically resonating with your guitar. The same exact thing could be happening with your truss rod. If it is, you’ll notice what sounds like ridiculous amounts of fret buzz. For guitars, this can be caused by any string, but typically the bass strings. For bass guitars, it will stand out even more because of the mass of the string. When that truss rod is vibrating, it robs tone and sustain from your playing, and you’ll be scratching your head trying to figure out how your action is super high but you’re still getting fret buzz. This can be determined if all steps to ensure the guitar is buzz free have been done, but still have a buzz present. The solution is to remove the truss rod and either replace it, or add material to the truss rod to absorb the vibrations. For some guitars, this can be a more involved procedure, while others are little easier.