lawajava Posted July 26 Share Posted July 26 I came across this clip and guitar tuning suggestion. Give the guy a min or two to get through his intro. It's interesting. I'm going to try it. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Glenn Stanton Posted July 26 Share Posted July 26 (edited) you can buy "zero fret" nuts. i have one installed on my strat. once installed and set intonation and action, unbelievable. nearly perfect intonation (as much as straight frets and equal temperament tuning get you) and easy playing even when i switched to 12's on the high E. https://www.stewmac.com/luthier-tools-and-supplies/materials/nuts-and-saddles/zero-glide-nuts/ Edited July 26 by Glenn Stanton 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lawajava Posted Wednesday at 04:47 PM Author Share Posted Wednesday at 04:47 PM Thanks - will look at that! Interesting to see these techniques. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Glenn Stanton Posted Wednesday at 04:54 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:54 PM (edited) just after i installed it and before going back to 12s on the E. also, while you have the strings off - i recommend giving your frets a nice polishing and clean the fretboard 🙂 Edited Wednesday at 04:56 PM by Glenn Stanton Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Starship Krupa Posted Saturday at 09:09 PM Share Posted Saturday at 09:09 PM On 7/30/2025 at 9:54 AM, Glenn Stanton said: just after i installed it Hmm. While I am quite interested in zero fret nuts, the photo looks as if the zero fret is closer to the 1st fret than if you just used a regular nut. Seems like that would mess up intonation rather than improving it, but since you've actually done it and like it, I guess it's not a problem. Or is the way that it works the plastic part of the nut gets narrower to accommodate the zero fret being moved further toward the headstock? Can you post where you bought the nut? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mettelus Posted Sunday at 08:37 AM Share Posted Sunday at 08:37 AM 11 hours ago, Starship Krupa said: While I am quite interested in zero fret nuts, the photo looks as if the zero fret is closer to the 1st fret than if you just used a regular nut. The apex of the zero nut is in line with the tang of the fret, so if it is constructed properly it should be exactly on the end of the fretboard (no change). The StewMac link @Glenn Stanton posted above was the reference where he got it, but in that pic the tang is rolled forward slightly from back pressure by the nut (so is sort of a hybrid between perfectly vertical and the video in the OP). The zero fret has no barbs on the tang, so you can still fiddle with the shelf on the nut to adjust as needed. With softer fretboards, be careful cycling a nut in and out though... you can reinforce it some with superglue just to harden the nut face (I wouldn't glue that fret in, maybe a couple small drops on the nut; the strings do the grunt work holding a nut in place). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Glenn Stanton Posted Sunday at 12:37 PM Share Posted Sunday at 12:37 PM (edited) yes, i got it from stwmac. and the metal fret lines up where the original nut edge would have been. basically it's a fret wire backed by the nut to keep the strings aligned, and the kit comes with a few different size wires. i picked the very narrow one. but it's easy to swap them (which i did before settling on the narrow one). as noted, intonation is better, action is better. makes you wonder why the guitar companies don't do this out of the box... lol. probably the extra 5¢ per guitar cuts into the shareholder dividends... Edited Sunday at 12:37 PM by Glenn Stanton Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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