Michael Kelly Rick Turner S6 Owner'S Manual Download Page 1

Strings

S6 & S6 Flame: D’Addario EXP16 Coated Phosphor Bronze (.012-.053). 
N6: D’Addario EXP45 Coated (Normal Tension). 
B4: D’Addario EXL170 Long Scale (.045-.100). 
To change them, feed the string through the string ferrule on the back of the instrument, over the saddle, and to the 
tuner post. Make sure to leave enough slack in the string to get two or three good wraps around the post. 
More wraps than this will cause tuning problems later. Tune the string to pitch, then stretch the string at the 12th fret. 
Repeat these steps until the wraps are tight and the string stays in tune.

After playing It’s always a good idea to completely wipe down the body, fretboard, strings, and hardware 
prior to putting your guitar away. The natural oils from your fingers can, over time, damage the finish and 
hardware of your instrument.
Any quality guitar polish/cleaner can be used on your Michael Kelly instrument if it has a gloss finish. We 
recommend not using furniture polish because it will leave a filmy residue that will build up over time. 

You should only deep clean your fretboard once or twice a year so you don’t disturb the natural moisture 
of the wood. Cleaning too much could dry out the fretboard and create cracks in the wood. It’s also 
important to oil the board twice a year. We recommend bore or mineral oil for this. Just remove the 
strings, apply a small amount of your preferred oil to the fretboard and let it sit for a while to soak in. 
After about 30 minutes wipe off any residual oil and restring.

The first step is to 
“eyeball” the neck by 
turning the guitar on its 
side and looking down 
the fretboard. You will 
be checking to see if 
the neck is straight, has a back-bow, or too much relief. 
Make sure your guitar is tuned to pitch before checking 
the neck. Some players like a perfectly straight neck and 
some like to keep a bit of relief in their necks. A perfectly 
straight neck might not work if you pick hard and still like 
very low action. If that’s the case a small amount of relief 
will be better for you.
Sight down the neck from the headstock to see how 
much of a bow or back-bow the neck has. To do this hold 
the neck up to eye level and sight along the edge of the 
fretboard on both treble and bass sides. If the neck is 
bowed, you will have to tighten the truss rod. If the neck 
has a back-bow you will have to loosen the truss rod.
Place the 4 mm allen wrench supplied with your guitar 
on the adjustment nut of the truss rod and turn gently in 
small increments. Turn the allen wrench towards the treble 
side to loosen and towards the bass side to tighten. Keep 
checking the neck with each small turn until the neck has 
the desired straightness.
Make sure to not tighten the rod too much (when it 
becomes hard to turn) because it could result in stripping 
the threads or perhaps even breaking the rod itself.
Once you have made your adjustments to the neck you 
might have to adjust the action of the strings to prevent 
fret buzz.

Fretboard 
Maintenance

Cleaning & 
Maintenance

Truss Rod 
Adjustment

More Relief

(loosen)

Less Relief

(tighten)

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Rick Turner Models Owners Manual

S6 and S6 Flame, N6, and B4

1

MichaelKellyGuitars.com

Back-bow

Up-bow/relief

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