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Author Topic:  Fender 400 Knee Levers
Scott Swartz


From:
St. Louis, MO
Post  Posted 24 Oct 2012 8:45 am    
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I recently added two knee levers to a 23 inch scale Fender 400 and wanted to post the info/findings/suggestions for others. The overall goal was levers that feel and work as well as those on a modern steel.

My recently purchased 400 has 4 pedals, and I originally set it up E9 with pedal 1 E-F, pedals 2 and 3 the AB pedals, and the fourth pedal lowering E-D#. With no levers, this works OK but its limited and it was hard to work around my muscle memory of having and using levers. I disassembled and cleaned the changer when I got the guitar, and was pleasantly surprised about how accurate all the changes and returns are working, but the lack of levers was frustrating.

Some thoughts on the copedent:

-Without the top two chromatic strings of 10 string E9, adding two levers raising and lowering the Es would be adequate I decided, and I do those Paul Franklin style so both levers are non reversing, LKL and RKL.

-I also decided to stay within the single raise/single lower and not have half stop tuners under the guitar.

-I wanted it to as close to my full 10 string setup so there is no confusion playing one or the other. Not having the top two strings is easy calibrate to, but I did not want to have to relearn pedals and levers.

The full 4+2 setup is this:

Tab:

________________LKL____ P1_____P2_____P3______P4______RKL________

1__G#__.011_____________-G____________+A________________________
2__E___.014_____+F____________________________________-D#________
3__B___.018___________________++C#___________-A#________________
4__G#__.022w____________-G____________+A________________________
5__F#__.026_____________________________________________________
6__E___.030_____+F____________________________________-D#________
7__D___.034__________________________________-C#________________
8__B___.038___________________++C#______________________________



Pedals 1, 2, 3, and the levers are exactly as I normally play. I am experimenting with pedal 4 but basically I am using it for the “missing” changes from my 10 string setup. Currently pedal 4 plus E to D# gives a nice pentatonic across strings 7 to 3 plus some other moves. I am missing string 7 F# to G on RKR and may add a single pull lever to get that at some point, raises are much easier to deal with on 400s.



Cable Assembly

-Brass tube and .055 music wire were purchased from a K & S Metals display at my local electronics store, also available at McMaster Carr
-A pulley and 1/16 wire rope from Home Depot, pulley eye was ground off and a 3-48 hole tapped
-The music wire changer clips, brass tube, and wire rope were connected using acid core silver bearing solder

Knee Levers

-I purchased cross shafts, pillow blocks, bell cranks, rods and stops from Williams Guitar Company.
-The pull rods were cut to length and threaded 3-48 to mate with the pulley.


Gear Up Assemby

You will notice a third crossshaft, that is present to gear up the travel for the long travel required to lower on these guitars. For a semitone drop (dropping E to D#) the finger itself must move 3/8 inch or so, which translates into a ridiculous amount of travel for a direct acting lever with a normal height bellcrank. With the gear up, I have right at 1 inch of travel at the point my leg touches the RKL lever, matching the travel of the LKL E to F change (the raise finger only needs to pull about 1/8 inch by the way).

On the gear up linkage, I originally tried a normal .094 diameter pull rod, but it was way too flexible to work in compression as this linkage must. My plan B was drill the bellcrank holes to 1/8 diameter and use two shoulder screws and a ¼ x ½ flat bar for the link. The ¼ x ½ size is overkill, but I had it laying around, I would recommend 3/16 X 3/8, that would be plenty strong. Also note I turned the bellcranks so the force is applied to stronger part of the bellcrank (since the rod holes are off center).

The other important point to making this work is changing out the return springs.

Return Springs

The stock Fender springs are much stronger than needed, and combined with the long travel required for lowering make for long and stiff action. The stock springs are .056 inch wire, so the spring rate (lbs per inch of extension) is too high in addition to the high preload. The answer is smaller wire diameter springs with enough preload to hold the lower fingers against the stop. That way, the force to actuate the pedal or lever is not too high.

For pedal lowers I used .048 inch wire springs sourced from McMaster, part number 9654K213, its 2.75 inch long 3/8 diameter, you can straighten out one of the loop ends and make the small hook required. For a little more resistance, you can use the 2.50 inch long version part number 9654K212 .

For the RKL, I needed an even softer spring to get the feel of the lever correct (ie not too stiff). I found a .344 diameter .041 wire size spring at my local Ace Hardware, it was #20 in the drawers, and they come from Hillman who supply all the nuts/bolts/screws/etc at Ace. It was longer than I needed, so I had to unwind several coils and remake the hook to get the right preload. The key is the spring rate in lbs per inch for the .041 wire is correct for good lever feel.

To straighten and remake the hooks requires two needlenose pliers, perhaps a vise, a lot of patience, and probably a few extra springs in case you screw up, but the difference in action is amazing.

Another mod I did for playing ergonomics was to round the edges of the pedals, see the pic. The pedal edges are sharp from the casting process and some of the paint was worn off anyway, so I rounded the edges and sanded the top for better appearance and playability. Many modern guitars have sharp edged pedals also, but I personally hate this.










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Scott Swartz
Steeltronics - Steel Guitar Pickups
www.steeltronics.com
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Roger Shackelton

 

From:
MINNESOTA (deceased)
Post  Posted 27 Oct 2012 4:34 pm    
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HI SCOTT,

I Like Your Attention To Detail On Your Fender.

These Old Fender Steel Guitars Were Over Engineered. They Are Very Heavy Beasts, Compared To Current PSGs. Smile
They Can Be Made More Playable By Changing Some Of The Hardware.


Roger
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Jim Sliff


From:
Lawndale California, USA
Post  Posted 15 Apr 2015 12:25 pm    
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Very clean work! Quit a bit different from Red Rhode's old "barn door hinge: system!

A great example of how easily these guitars can be modified, with everything from knee levers to double raise/lower, tuner upgrades - and for the short scale models some of us are working on smaller-radius pull fingers to increase sustain and improve tone.
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No chops, but great tone
1930's/40's Rickenbacher/Rickenbacker 6&8 string lap steels
1921 Weissenborn Style 2; Hilo&Schireson hollownecks
Appalachian, Regal & Dobro squarenecks
1959 Fender 400 9+2 B6;1960's Fender 800 3+3+2; 1948 Fender Dual-8 Professional
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Ross Shafer


From:
Petaluma, California
Post  Posted 21 Nov 2020 8:04 am    
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nicely done Scott!
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Andy Beisel


From:
Saskatchewan, Canada
Post  Posted 22 Nov 2020 8:27 am    
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Great work! I’ve been wanting to add proper functioning knee levers on my 1000 for some time now. My current knee levers are less than good. Now you have to post a video so we can hear it in action!
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Bob Carlucci

 

From:
Candor, New York, USA
Post  Posted 22 Nov 2020 8:45 am    
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Gorgeous work.. Quick question-
I see where you have the support blocks for the cross shafts set in the frame on one end and on the wood body on the other, which would make the entire set up "lean" a bit. No problem with that, or did you shim the side that was set into the wood body so that it sat a bit higher?.. In any case, beautiful job, one of the cleanest I have seen yet on a Fender. THIS is the steel Fender should have made. bob
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I'm over the hill and hittin'rocks on the way down!

no gear list for me.. you don't have the time......
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Scott Swartz


From:
St. Louis, MO
Post  Posted 22 Nov 2020 5:37 pm    
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Bob, you are correct, I made a plastic spacer to ensure the cross shaft is parallel to the body, needs to be about 5/32 thick, and I disc sanded it to the exact footprint of the nylon part so its basically hidden.
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Scott Swartz
Steeltronics - Steel Guitar Pickups
www.steeltronics.com
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Jon Zimmerman

 

From:
California, USA
Post  Posted 23 Nov 2020 11:19 am    
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Ditto above accolades, Scott. Simple and elegant results. It all fits in the case too, I imagine. 😎
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Scott Swartz


From:
St. Louis, MO
Post  Posted 23 Nov 2020 7:03 pm    
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Just barely fits in the case, the very top of the bellcranks imprints about 1/16 into the padding of the lid. There is no resistance in closing the case so I called it good. If I had cut one adjustment slot off the bellcranks it would not touch, however on the gear down I am using the the highest slot for the most mechanical advantage so left it as is. When folded up the levers themselves are not as deep as the frame so all good there.
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Scott Swartz
Steeltronics - Steel Guitar Pickups
www.steeltronics.com
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