I ordered an option order L-2500. My first 5 string.

It's really beautiful and pretty much flawless, save for one annoying thing that has affected almost every G&L with saddle lock I've encountered.
The action I prefer on bass is 5.5/64ths bass side and 4.5/64ths treble side with no capo(with capo just subtract about 1/64th), and a relief of the straight side of .012". usually around .011". These specs are low, but not ridiculous. If you have fast, light touch, you can get away with no buzzing assuming your frets are level.
Anyway, the neck is at .011" relief, and the G saddle is decked. The lowest the action will go is 5/64ths WITH capo, so actually more like 6/64ths no capo. Consequently, the lowest I can get the action is 6/64th-6/64th all the way across, no capo.
Most people would consider this playable, but "medium to medium-high action."
The same thing happened with my ASAT bass, although not as severe. I could BARELY get 5/64ths no capo on the treble side.
The point is, it really needs a shim. They both do. I'm going to have a full contact wood shim made by my luthier, and it's not a huge deal, but honestly, I think this is an annoying design flaw of the saddle lock bridge.
Those saddles are SO tall. I imagine the only way you get the headroom for low action without a shim is if the neck depth is at its maximum allowable tolerance, which I assume is luck-based, and even then, 4/64ths is probably the end of the road.
They could fix this problem by recessing the whole bridge assembly deeper into the body and doing a string-through design, or just making the saddles a tad shorter(but not so short they create an unfavorable break angle)
Anyway, once I get the shim I think it'll be set it and forget it but it's happened to me three times now(I bought a fallout for my uncle that also needed a shim).
Is this a common problem for saddle-lock people? Anyone else know my pain?