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back of the guitar body. On the inside wall of this cavity you will see a small 1/8” hole. Run the
stripped end of the blue ground wire (attached to the neck pickup volume control) through this
hole until it emerges in the hole drilled for the tailpiece bushing. Form the naked wire into a loop,
wrap it around the bushing and tap the bushing tightly into the hole. This will ground the circuit.
Installing the tailpiece bushings may be done with a plastic headed mallet or place a small piece of
wood on top of the bushing to prevent damage and tap the bushing in place with an ordinary
hammer. Now screw the tailpiece mounting screws back into the bushings.
8. THE BRIDGE (PART J)
Now tap the bridge bushings into place and screw in the bridge mounting studs. Attach the bridge.
9. OUTPUT JACK (PART C)
The output jack is attached to the neck pickup tone control pot by a blue grounding wire. Find the
green wire running from the pickup selector switch and attach it to the green wire on the output
jack. Push the output jack and its wire through the 7/8” hole that has been drilled between the
control cavity and the edge of the body.
Attach the output jack plate (Part C) to the output jack (See figure 6) using the washer and nut
provided. Screw the output jack plate to the body with the two 3/8” screws provided.
10. BACK PLATE (PART F)
Carefully stuff all of the “spaghetti” into the control cavity and attach the back plate using the
three screws provided.
11. TUNERS (PART K)
Attach the six tuning machines to the peghead of the guitar putting a washer beneath each
threaded bushing. A small set screw is put in place to prevent the tuner from rotating.
SET UP
Put on the strings and tune to pitch.
1. TRUSS ROD ADJUSTMENT
The adjustable truss rod in the neck of your Guitar has been shop adjusted and should not require
any change. If the neck should develop a dip or hollow spot over time it can be removed by
tightening the truss rod adjustment nut that protrudes from the base of the headstock just above the
nut.
A "back bow" or "hog-back" can be removed by loosening the nut. Great care should be taken
with truss rod adjustments where as little as 1/4 of a turn can vastly alter the shape of a neck. A
broken truss rod of course means a costly replacement.
2. STRING ACTION
The string "action" refers to the height of the strings above the frets. If the action is too low, the
strings will buzz on the frets. If it is too high the guitar will be difficult to play.
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