It was (supposedly) setup by the seller before shipment. It seems reasonably well setup as far as I can tell, except for a fair amount of fret buzz on the low strings (the wound ones, E, A, D). Strings are stock 10-46 (which is what I normally use).
The buzz seems to happen not just on open strings, but on pretty much all fret positions. By buzz, I mean if I'm fretting X, then the string vibrates against fret X+1. If I pick very lightly, there is no buzz. But moderate picking and on up, it's fairly distracting.
Researching this a bit, one thing everyone says is check the frets. So that's question #1: do all recent USA-made G&L guitars get the Plek treatment? My spec sheet doesn't list the Plek technicians, but having looked at a lot of spec sheets on online listings, I know they used to list the individuals who did the setup and fret work. I assume if the frets were Plek'ed, and this is a brand-new guitar, the frets are unlikely to be the culprit?
Second, is this link still the best to follow for setup/adjustment tips: Set-Ups, answering some questions?
If so, one of the earlier paragraphs is a bit alarming:
I assume by "last fret", that means the 22nd fret?The other thing that is a very common problem to check for is tongue rise. This occurs when the end of the neck slopes up, making the upper frets higher as you go up the neck, which will make the whole guitar buzz and will often cause fretting out on bends on the upper frets. If you hold the string down at the 12th fret and the last fret, it becomes a straight edge. Look at the distance between the bottom of the string and the top of the frets. There shouldn’t be ANY. The truss rod does not function on the upper part of the neck. You want the 12th fret to the end of the neck to be either perfectly straight, OR, ideally, have a slight bit of drop off. If you see space between the top of the fret and the bottom of the string, you are not going to get the best action and purest tone you can. If there is significant space, you are going to have severe buzzing/fretting out issues.
When I do this with the low-E, there is a very slight gap between the bottom of the string and the top of the frets. I don't have any way to measure this. But I did the same on my other two guitars, and they also have a very slight gap as well, and neither of them have quite the same amount of fret buzz.
I also laid an 18" steel ruler's edge along all the frets, to see if if there was a little neck relief. My thought is that if the ruler could "rock" (like a see-saw), then the neck is convex, and has no relief. That is definitely not the case. In fact, it appears there is a slight gap between the bottom of the ruler and the tops of most of the frets, which to me implies there is some small amount of concave relief in the neck. This crude measurement holds for my other two guitars as well.
For sake of argument, assuming the frets and neck relief are good, is my only remaining option to increase the action height? I generally like lower action, and the current height is about right for me. And, going purely by feel, my other two guitars have the same or lower action, without this amount of buzz.
For reference, my other two guitars are:
- 2016 Kiesel CT324. I believe this has a 14" neck radius, hardtail. Action height feels approximately the same as the ASAT. Virtually no fret buzz, unless I really hammer the strings.
- 1999 Gibson Les Paul Standard. Not sure about the neck radius, I believe it's a 12". This guitar definitely has lower action than the other two. I get a little fret buzz with open strings and aggressive strumming. But rarely any buzz on fretted notes or general semi-heavy or lighter picking.