SJG wrote:If this was an old Fender I'd say yep...the neck shifted to one side which was a very common problem. That problem was caused by the neck pocket being way to sloppy. This is not a Fender, it's a G&L, and G&L's have extremely tight neck pockets. In order to move those strings over to the right alignment there would have to be at least a .030" gap between the neck and the body on the high E side. Not going to happen on a G&L. Either the neck pocket was cut in the wrong place or the bridge was mounted off to the side. I would think the latter.
Have him send it back and do a little QC investigation Dave. Post the results. Lot of enthusiats interested in this one. I'd much rather own up to a mislocated bridge than admit G&L neck pockets are so loose you can adjust string location with the neck.
Joe, can you post a picture of both sides of the neck pocket?
You know I'm always fine with handling things when they go wrong. Thing is, this really does happen, and on high end bolt-on guitars like G&L as well. The neck pocket is snug, but it's not tight enough to stress the wood. There is enough give in the body wood that the neck can be shifted with enough steady torque or sudden impact, which of course puts more stress on the wood and that's why sometimes when "shift happens" that it causes a stress crack in the body finish. You've seen that happen here: once in a while a guy posts a pic of his guitar with a crack right at the neck pocket. That's from a whack in shipping, or the guitar was dropped on stage etc. Also remember that the neck is held with wood screws, and the guitar may have gone a long distance through climate changes (shrinkage/expansion) and those wood screws may have lost some tension, increasing the likelihood that it's going to suffer more upon impact. As for the the bridge, it can't be in the wrong location relative to the neck pocket or any other routing on the front of the guitar, because they're done at the same time when the body blank is on the Haas CNC, with it's location fixed by two beefy locating pins plus vacuum suction below. When it's on the Haas, it doesn't shift, period.
The bummer is that it seems tough to believe, but all of us making bolt-on guitars, from the top-end down to the basement, have to deal with it. Fortunately, here in the US the UPS people are good with taking care of our claims. Usually dealers take care of this, or perhaps the distributor if it's outside the US, but sometimes they come back here and we straighten things out. Again, just because this happens from time to time doesn't mean it's rampant. It's just an inherent risk of shipping.
Regards,
Dave