What's the use case for a thickness measurement tool in a guitar toolkit?
I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?
Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.
guitar maintenance
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I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?
Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.
guitar maintenance
New contributor
add a comment |
I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?
Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.
guitar maintenance
New contributor
I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?
Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.
guitar maintenance
guitar maintenance
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New contributor
New contributor
asked 8 hours ago
crater2150
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Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.
If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.
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This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
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Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.
If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.
add a comment |
Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.
If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.
add a comment |
Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.
If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.
Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.
If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.
answered 2 hours ago
Todd Wilcox
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This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
add a comment |
This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
add a comment |
This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.
This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.
answered 7 hours ago
b3ko
3,521917
3,521917
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.
– crater2150
6 hours ago
add a comment |
crater2150 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
crater2150 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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