Re: Very strange intonation
My best guess is that the nut is cut so the contact point is at the head side of the nut rather than at the fretboard side of the nut.
Re: Very strange intonation
[QUOTE=Nevin;1795515]My best guess is that the nut is cut so the contact point is at the head side of the nut rather than at the fretboard side of the nut.[/QUOTE
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Thank you. I will check that out.
Re: Very strange intonation
"Cheap" instruments, and dearer ones too, regularly have the nut slots left higher than needed when they leave the makers, working on the assumption that it is easier to lower a slot than to try to fill in one that is too deep. Shawn has pointed you to a possible cause of the problem and I would agree with his suggestion. Check the clearance at the first fret on your E strings and if it is higher than the other strings then it needs lowered. The fact that the string intonates a fret higher would also back up this idea - the string is having to travel further because of the high nut slots, so is playing out of pitch in relation to the other string pairs.
Re: Very strange intonation
Not to discount any sage advice that has already been suggested, but is it also possible that the saddle is mounted on the bridge backwards so the intonation compensation is reversed?
Re: Very strange intonation
My first mandolin - a $25 pawn shop Harmony - had a pair of E strings that would progressively go out of tune with each other as you went up the neck. It took a while to figure out that there was a small chip in the nut that moved the outer E string's point of contact back just slightly. I'd spend the money to have a pro look it over, perform a set-up and make it a playable mandolin rather than a mandolin-shaped object.
Re: Very strange intonation
Could the top have collapsed asymmetrically -on the fourth string side?
Would that give the observed issues?
Re: Very strange intonation
I don't know about you guys but the first thing I would look at with it being a full fret off is the frets themselves. Like a high or low or loose fret in the area of that string. Specifically if the 11th fret were loose or raised in the slot then it would be a fret low at the 12th. Carefully tapping the fret down may fix it. Occasionally raising the bridge a small amount can fix it. If not it may need a luthier to look at it and file frets or glue the end of the fret down.
A nut or bridge saddle is not likely to move the note by that much.
Re: Very strange intonation
If I understand you correctly, the harmonic on the “e” strings occurs at the 13th fret instead of at the 12th fret like the other strings. To me, that indicates that the “e” strings are probably making full contact with the first fret, so the nut slots are too deep.
Re: Very strange intonation
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ward Elliott
If I understand you correctly, the harmonic on the “e” strings occurs at the 13th fret instead of at the 12th fret like the other strings. To me, that indicates that the “e” strings are probably making full contact with the first fret, so the nut slots are too deep.
Me too.
Easy to check - play that E string open and fretted at the 1st fret. If the notes are the same ...
Re: Very strange intonation
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Nevin
My best guess is that the nut is cut so the contact point is at the head side of the nut rather than at the fretboard side of the nut.
You were right. I made a new nut and it fixed the problem. Thank you for your help.
Re: Very strange intonation