Joe:
I've never heard of the truss rod adjustment having anything to do with strings breaking. The rod sets the amount of curve (bow ) in the neck. It has some effect on tone, and the ease of playing, but, to my knowledge, no effect on the likelyhood of a string snapping unless the neck is incredibly bowed. If the neck is bowed so much that you would be stretching strings a long way to pull them down onto the frets, you would have noticed this as a substantial intonation problem.long before the string problem emerged.
One thing on a Les Paul that can have an effect on string breakage however is the angle of the strings as they come back from the bridge to the tail piece. The instruments are usually shipped with the tail piece screwed all the way down. If you unscrew the two big tail piece studs a few turns, this lessens the break angle of the strings across the bridge.
Another possibility to look into is using graphite saddles on the bridge. These self lubricate, and don't tend to "saw" at the string so much.
Rather than filing on the bridge, I would suggest getting a piece of fine grit (600 or greater) carborundum paper, folding it into a wedge, and using this to smooth the string slot. A file often leaves the very same burrs and sharp edges that can lead to breakage in the first place.
Good luck. the Les Paul is my favorite instrument.
2007-03-12 12:17:12
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answer #1
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answered by Martin H 2
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the adjustment might help a little. The saddle could be sharp. What kind of strings do u use. D' adario usally break a lot. Try a heavier gage string. When mine break they break at the saddle and i try to sand it down a little
2007-03-12 20:32:16
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answer #2
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answered by Joey M 2
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I had the same problem with the low E for awhile. It generally occurs when you mix unclean strings (our skin oils do a number on the core of a wound string, not to mention a non-winding string like a high-E) and playing right at the bridge.
2007-03-12 19:06:56
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answer #3
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answered by necrowulf1980 2
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check your string tension. how long have you been playing for? cause i know a lot of new guitarists make their string tensions too high. another thing you could try, is playing with like 12's. or you could also try using a lighter gauge pick if you are a very agressive guitarists. and if none of these work, bring it into your local guitar shop.
peace & love
t-par & ally
2007-03-12 19:12:52
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answer #4
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answered by T 4
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take it in to a local store/repair shop and have them adjust the truss rod and re-string it. mention the problem you're having and they should be able to take care of it for you. you might need to up your string gauge.
2007-03-12 19:03:43
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answer #5
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answered by kcrisler1980 2
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Well, i had that problem, but i just kept playing it. If its a new guitar, maybe you just have to break it in. Sorry if that wasn't the answer you wanted but i thought id try.
2007-03-12 19:04:19
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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take it in to a guitar center and ask them too about it all.
2007-03-12 19:43:13
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answer #7
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answered by cadaholic 7
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