Acoustic Guitar Bridge Repair 101

Acoustic Guitar Bridge Repair 101

How to Fix a Broken or Loose Acoustic Guitar Bridge

Loose Acoustic Guitar Bridge

The acoustic guitar bridge serves many functions on the guitar. It not only sets the placement of the strings, the bridge also plays a crucial role in good tone, action, and intonation. That is why it is important to understand how your acoustic guitar bridge works and how to maintain it.

In this article, I’ll discuss acoustic guitar bridge construction and purpose, how a bridge can break, and how to fix it so your guitar can play great again. Let’s first take a look at what an acoustic guitar bridge does and how it is made.


Guitar Bridge Repair Tools You Will Need

Here is a list of acoustic guitar bridge repair tools that you will need to do most repairs on your acoustic guitar.

Acoustic Guitar Bridge Repair Tool Kit

acoustic-guitar-bridge-repair-tool-kit

Here is a complete set of tools for doing the most common acoustic guitar bridge repairs. It includes all the tools to steam and remove the bridge as well as tools to clamp and glue it back on the guitar. This set is a must have.

 

What does an Acoustic Guitar Bridge do?

Action and intonation

The obvious answer is that it holds the strings in the body. Yes, that is true, but a bridge does much more than that. The bridge not only holds the strings securely in the guitar body, it also sets the string spacing. A small change in the string spacing can drastically change the entire feeling of the instrument. Maybe even more important than string spacing, the guitar bridge sets the intonation of the guitar. Depending on the position or the bridge and saddle, the guitar might have perfect intonation or might not be able to be tuned properly. The angle and position of the saddle slot in the bridge is key to setting the intonation of any guitar.

The acoustic guitar bridge also plays a big role in setting the string height or action of the instrument. The guitar saddle sets the action of the guitar by sitting in the saddle slot of the bridge. I wrote a three-step process to setting the action on an acoustic guitar. Check out the action page for more info about how to lower the action on an acoustic guitar.

Acoustic Guitar Brace

The bridge also acts as a brace to reinforce the guitar body. Since most acoustic guitar braces are on the inside of the guitar, you may have never thought of the bridge being an external brace. Internal guitar braces help support the load from the tension of the guitar strings. The bridge does the same thing only on the outside of the body. Take a look at the acoustic guitar brace patterns page for more details about guitar braces.


Acoustic Guitar Bridge Construction

Acoustic Guitar Wood

Acoustic guitar bridges are traditionally made out of dense woods like ebony and rosewood. Pretty much all high-end guitars have ebony bridges. Dense wood is traditional because of its structure, strength, and tone. Acoustic guitar bridges take a lot of abuse from the guitar strings. It is important to have a material that will hold up after years of playing.

Since acoustic guitar bridges are small, they are usually carved out of a single piece of wood. There are many different configurations of acoustic bridges. Some bridges require pins to hold the strings in place while other string-thru designs hold the strings in place by the string balls. Saddle designs also vary among guitars. Some acoustics have multiple saddle pieces while others have straight or compensated saddles.

Even though there is a great deal of variation in acoustic guitar bridge design, the basics are the same. It is a solid piece of wood that is glued directly to the top of the guitar. Direct gluing is important. If you are trying to re-glue a bridge, make sure you completely remove all the finish, old glue, and debris before you try to glue the bridge back on. I’ll talk more about this later in the article.


What causes a guitar bridge to break or become loose?

There are many different reasons why an acoustic guitar bridge can break, crack, or separate from the body. The two main reasons are improper environmental conditions and abuse.

Acoustic Guitar Dryness and Humidity

Like with any guitar, the surrounding environment plays a big roll in the life of the guitar. Any form of severe weather can be traumatic to your guitar whether it is hot, cold, humid, or dry. Environmental changes cannot only ruin the cosmetic appearance of your guitar like cracks in the finish; it can also harm the structural integrity of your guitar.

Guitar Temperature

Acoustic Guitar Bridge Peeling Away From Body

Excessive heat can heat up the glue on your acoustic guitar braces causing them to come loose from the body. If the braces are not properly connected to the top of the guitar, your guitar top can warp from the string tension. This is one cause of a loose bridge. If the X-braces become loose and stops providing support for the top, the top usually caves in and places most of the string tension the bridge. Since the bridge isn’t designed to hold this much weight it can start to peel away from the body.

Excessive heat can also heat the glue joint up of the bridge itself. If the guitar gets too hot, the glue holding the bridge in place will slowly soften causing the string tension to pull the bridge forward (toward the sound hole). As I mentioned before, bridge placement is a key factor in proper intonation. If the bridge starts sliding forward, your guitar’s intonation might get messed up too.

The moral of the story is never leave your guitar in a hot car during the summer. It doesn’t matter how long you have to run into the store or go pick something up. Don’t do it. A car in the summer is a greenhouse just waiting to melt your guitar. Keep an eye on your acoustic when you travel during the summer and you can avoid most of these temperature related issues.

Guitar Humidity

Humidity is just as dangerous to guitars as extreme temperature shifts and swings. Humidity can cause the guitar wood to swell or shrink and crack the finish. High humidity will allow your guitar to absorb more moisture out of the air. The guitar wood will fill up with water and expand while the hardened finish on the guitar will stay a constant size. The expanding of the wood can crack the finish.

High humidity is definitely and issue with acoustic guitars, but low humidity is what ruins guitar bridges. Low humidity has the opposite effect on electric guitar wood. The guitar wood dries out and shrinks while the hardened finish maintains the same shape. If a guitar is dry enough, the top will turn into a concave shape bowing down in the middle where the bridge is glued. This can cause the bridge to come loose. Most luthiers agree that an ideal humidity is around 50%. It can be a little more or a little less, but this is a good rule of thumb. During dry winter months, you may need to place a humidifier in your guitar case in order to maintain the humidity around 50 percent.


Improper Gluing

In order for any glue joint to hold up under extreme pressure, it has to be prepped and cleaned properly. The same is true about guitar bridges. If the top of the guitar wasn’t cleaned and sanded properly before the bridge was glued on, you might have a problem with this later. This can happen when someone wants to replace his or her bridge with another one. Instead of properly cleaning the top of the guitar they just rip off the old one and glue on a new one. Most likely there is still finish on the guitar top and the new bridge won’t properly adhere to the guitar body.


Cracked and Warped Bridges

Usually guitar bridges don’t have a problem cracking or warping because they are glued to the guitar top. Unfortunately, once the bridge has pulled away from the body, it doesn’t have the support of the guitar. While the bridge is peeling away from the body, it can warp from the tension of the strings or even crack. Cracks can also happen from extremely dry conditions.

Cracked Guitar Bridge Plates

The bridge plate is a brace or plate that is glued directly under the bridge to help support the tension of the guitar strings. It is not uncommon for these to have the same problems as the bridge. A cracked bridge plate usually has to be replaced instead of reglued.


How to Fix a Loose Acoustic Guitar Bridge

Now that we have covered the possible problems, let’s take a look at how to fix your guitar bridge.

Diagnose the Problem

Loose Martin D-28 Guitar Bridge Pulling Away From Body

If your bridge is loose or cracked, you will need to remove it from the body and re-glue it or replace it. Take a look at the back of the bridge. Can you see a gap in between the bridge and the body? If so, it has come loose. Sometimes the gap is so small that you can’t see if easily. Take a piece of paper and slide it between the bridge and the body. If the bridge is properly glued, the paper shouldn’t be able to get between them.

Once you determine that you have to remove the bridge, get a card stock piece of paper and trace the bridge out on it. Then cut the bridge out of the paper. You can place the piece of paper down around the bridge like a guard while you are removing it to protect the finish.


Remove the Bridge

Heat up the Glue

After you have taken a loose at your loose bridge, you will most likely need to remove the whole thing. There are many ways to do this. You can place a heating pad on top of the bridge for a minute or so to heat the glue up. If you don’t want to buy a heating pad, you can also use a clothes iron with a towel to cover the bridge. Which ever you use, be very careful. You don’t want to heat the guitar top up too much. You could cause the braces to come loose or damage the finish on the top of the guitar.

Peel away the Bridge

After the glue is warm and loose, you can take a flexible, blunt putty knife and work it between the bridge and the body. Be careful not to damage the finish in the process. You may have to heat it a few times to get the putty knife all the way across the bridge. Just take everything nice and slow. You don’t want to over heat things and you don’t want to slip with the knife.


Clean the Joint

Clean the Body

Scrape Acoustic Finish to Glue Bridge

Clean the wood is one of the most important steps when gluing anything. First, you have to know exactly where to clean. I like to line the bridge up with dowel pins (like I talk about in the next section) and place the bridge on the guitar with double stick tape. This secures the bridge in place. Now I take a scribe or X-acto knife and cut a line in the finish around the bridge. After you score the finish, you can take some masking tape and outline the body around the bridge. This will protect the finish during the cleaning process.

Next, you can remove the bridge and start cleaning the guitar top. I usually use a chisel to scrape off the excess glue on the guitar top. Make sure not to slip with the chisel. You only want to remove the glue and finish from underneath the bridge.

Clean the Bridge

Cleaning the bridge is just as important as cleaning the body. You can use some sand paper to remove the glue on the bottom of the bridge. Since the top of the guitar is bent into a slight radius, you will need to match that with the bridge. Acoustic guitar tops are made with all types of radii ranging from 15′ to 100 foot. Measure the radius of your guitar top and buy a matching radius block. You can put stick sand paper on the radius block to sand the perfect shape into the bridge.


Bridge Placement

Glue Acoustic Guitar Bridge to Body

It is extremely important to line your bridge up properly before your glue it down. Otherwise, you might have to redo everything. I like to measure and mark the centerline of the bridge on the bottom and front side. That way I can line up the centerline on the bridge with the centerline of the guitar body.

Since this is the not the first time a bridge has been glued on the guitar, there will be bridge pin holes drilled in the top of the guitar. I place a wooden dowel in the first and last string holes of the bridge to line it up with the placement of the old bridge. Once the bridge is glued in place, the dowels can be drilled out. The picture to the left is of a guitar that I built. As you can see, the first and last string holes have been drilled for dowel placement.


Dry Run

Glue Acoustic Guitar Bridge

Once the bridge and the body are completely cleaned, you should clamp them together without any glue. I call this a dry run. Whenever you are gluing anything important on a guitar, you should do a dry run. That way you will see if your clamping idea, cauls, and clamps fit properly. Trust me; you don’t want to put glue on the guitar get it all clamped up and find out that something is wrong. You will be scraping glue off the stuff you just cleaned.

You’ll need a deep c-clamp in order to clamp the bridge in place. You will also want to make a special caul that will fit the inside of the guitar on the bridge plate between the X-braces. This way you can create the proper amount of pressure with out destroying anything. I usually just cut and shape a 1×4 board to fit in between the X-braces.


Glue the Guitar Bridge

Glue Acoustic Guitar Bridge

After a successful dry run, you can apply the glue. I use Titebond wood glue. On most glue joints I say to go sparingly on the glue–not this joint. The bridge has to be securely jointed with the body.

Make sure to put a good amount of glue on the body and clamp the bridge down just like the dry run.

Tighten down the clamp until you start to see a good amount of glue squeezing out of the seam.


Wipe off the Excess Glue

I usually use a damp cloth or paper towel to wipe off the excess squeeze out. Make sure to wipe it away immediately. You don’t want it to harden and ruin the finish. I usually like to let the bridge set up over night. This way there is plenty of time for the glue to dry. Take the clamps off the next day and you are ready to restring your guitar. Just make sure to be careful removing the clamp and caul. It is very easy to dent the inside of the sound hole with a deep c-clamp.

Now your bridge is re-glued and ready to be strung up. Time to restring your guitar and start playing again.

ARTICLE SOURCE:  Guitar Repair Bench