BCMCMoose
Well-known member
Hello all, new to the forum and never started a thread before. I hope I am doing it properly.
I just received a new BFR jp6 Koa from my wonderful wife as a 20yr anniversary present. The sales manager at GC raved about the new cobalts and wanted to string them up. I said go ahead. A bit later, after noodling other "platinum" guitars,(that sounded nowhere near as good as what I was getting!) I came back put to check his progress.
The low e now had a fret buzz. Unplugged, but you could hear it clearly buzzing. Not ready to deal with an issue on my gorgeous new guitar I told him to string it back with original spec strings. He did and the buzz went away.
Now I plan to try the Cobalts on my next set, but can anyone identify the possible problem? My thought is that he may have cut all the strings at once, then started re stringing on the low e side only, pulling the bridge out of whack? I mean if EB 10.s are stock, cobalt 10s shouldn't require any setup changes right?
I just received a new BFR jp6 Koa from my wonderful wife as a 20yr anniversary present. The sales manager at GC raved about the new cobalts and wanted to string them up. I said go ahead. A bit later, after noodling other "platinum" guitars,(that sounded nowhere near as good as what I was getting!) I came back put to check his progress.
The low e now had a fret buzz. Unplugged, but you could hear it clearly buzzing. Not ready to deal with an issue on my gorgeous new guitar I told him to string it back with original spec strings. He did and the buzz went away.
Now I plan to try the Cobalts on my next set, but can anyone identify the possible problem? My thought is that he may have cut all the strings at once, then started re stringing on the low e side only, pulling the bridge out of whack? I mean if EB 10.s are stock, cobalt 10s shouldn't require any setup changes right?