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1968 Goya N-26 with Allen screw addition These are stock saddles that can be found on some Swedish made acoustic guitars. They are made ...

Goya/Levin Adjustable Saddle Improvements

1968 Goya N-26 with Allen screw addition

These are stock saddles that can be found on some Swedish made acoustic guitars. They are made from plastic, have a raised hump in the center for the string to lie on, and are threaded to M8x0.75 through the bridge and bridge plate. Intonantion is suspect with these saddles and they are fairly difficult to adjust.

My first improvement to these are to flatten the tops of the saddles, find the truest point for correct intonation with a strobe tuner, and refile the plastic to reflect that. Because these saddles rotate 360 degrees for a very accurate height adjustment, I left enough material on the "humps" to allow for them to be filed down so the intonation is not lost on small adjustments.

My newly adjusted saddles, it is not easy to see but all of those have been specially filed to intonate correctly.
My second improvement was to drill a small hole into the bottom end of the saddles, thread in a small Allen-head machine screw, and superglue it in place. This allows for the saddles to be adjusted from within the soundhole via an Allen wrench and some patience. This is a substantial improvement over the original adjustment method which involved using pliers to grip the saddles.

I considered making new saddles out of bone but the prospect of trying to run bone through a die without chipping seemed difficult.

3 comments:

  1. Hi, I have to replace one of the saddles on my G-174. Are the holes for these saddles threaded already? Can you give me some insight into the materials, dimensions, thread pitch, and source of those things, I'd really appreciate it.

    If you make and sell these please let me know!

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  2. Sorry, I missed M8x0.75 on the first read. Still, I curious what more you know. Especially if you know where to get them.... ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you source some hard plastic rod, you can run it through a die it pretty easily and get a set of replacements! The bridge should already been threaded

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