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Post new topic Colored Tuners
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Author Topic:  Colored Tuners
Shane Glover

 

From:
Oklahoma, USA
Post  Posted 8 Jul 2009 4:12 pm    
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Hi Guys!! This may be a stupid question but I was just wondering . I have noticed several pics of guitars on the forum that look like someone has used
magic marker on the nylon tuning nuts . Is this a common practice ? If so is there a standard color scheme used ? Thanks for helping a newbie !!
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Danny Letz

 

From:
Old Glory,Texas, USA 79540
Post  Posted 8 Jul 2009 4:57 pm    
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Usually these are compensaters, split tuning, or half stop tuning nuts, but is handy if you need to differenciate one from another.
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Jeff Harbour


From:
Western Ohio, USA
Post  Posted 8 Jul 2009 4:58 pm    
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Oh, I started to worry... My Mom has told me about stuff like "colored" water fountains in Mississippi back in the 50s. I'm glad that kind of discrimination is not entering into our instrument!
Seriously, I'm interested to see what this is too. I would guess it's to make it easier to locate which pull is which, probably someone's personal system. I prefer just feeling for which one is being moved when I'm tuning. Maybe I'm wrong all together. We'll see.

Jeff
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Jeff Harbour


From:
Western Ohio, USA
Post  Posted 8 Jul 2009 5:00 pm    
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Beat my reply by a minute. Sorry if the information is doubled.
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Mark van Allen


From:
Watkinsville, Ga. USA
Post  Posted 8 Jul 2009 6:13 pm    
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Jeff, many of us do look or feel at the endplate to check which rod is moving on a "loaded up" string- but compensators or split tuning rods may move very little, it's helpful to color them differently to avoid adjusting the wrong thing!
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Richard Sinkler


From:
aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana
Post  Posted 8 Jul 2009 10:02 pm    
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I did that on my Carter when I bought it. I would color the nylon nuts that were on a particular pedal the same color. Sometimes when you press a pedal (like the C pedal)it also moves the E to F nut and you can't really tell which is which. The same happens on the Williams I bought last year, but I haven't colored the nuts. Just an easy way to tell which nut you need to turn.
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Carter D10 8p/8k, Dekley S10 3p/4k C6 setup,Regal RD40 Dobro, Recording King Professional Dobro, NV400, NV112,Ibanez Gio guitar, Epiphone SG Special (open D slide guitar) . Playing for 54 years and still counting.
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Tony Rankin


From:
Land O’ Lakes, FL
Post  Posted 9 Jul 2009 6:48 am    
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At least one prominent builder uses this color coding system and I've seen others using elements of this system.


Black = Return Compensators

Blue = Splits

Red = Half-stops

Green = Tuning Compensators
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Tony Rankin
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Donny Hinson

 

From:
Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
Post  Posted 9 Jul 2009 7:54 am    
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Quote:
Sometimes when you press a pedal (like the C pedal)it also moves the E to F nut and you can't really tell which is which.


That's a very common problem with guitars that use slotted pullers (which is why I hate them).
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