About a month ago, I have made that attempt, exactly as you have suggested. Even have the Mitchell Abrasive Cord in all 4 sizes which I used, too. I will re evaluate.
I have the Gibson specs on nut slot width...would that help you???
About a month ago, I have made that attempt, exactly as you have suggested. Even have the Mitchell Abrasive Cord in all 4 sizes which I used, too. I will re evaluate.
It's been a goal of mine for quite awhile to replace the cheap, plastic nut on my Washburn HB-30. Not only did it look cheap, it had the feel of the type of plastic you'd find in a plastic model airplane kit.
My plan is to eventually put some sort of vibrato on that guitar. Consequently, I've been looking at using something like the Graphtech Tusq XL nut, to help with return to pitch stability. That's really the main reason I've been wanting to replace the nut in the first place. It's somewhat of a pre-emptive move. Getting rid of a cheap-looking nut is a bonus.
Now, the tricky part is that there is no listing on Graphtech's website for anything for a Washburn. However, a Tusq nut for an Epiphone works quite well. The part number I ended up with is PQL-6061-00. This nut matched the thickness and string spacing perfectly. However, I did have to sand a fair amount off the bottom and just a touch off the ends.
I lucked out with this. I was a bit nervous about getting the height were it needed to be. But, I got it right where I needed it. The strings are high enough that I get no buzzing on the first few frets, yet I'm able to finger chords without pulling the notes sharp.
So, a few pics...
Here is the original nut. I don't know what purpose the hollow openings serve in the bottom of the nut, if any.
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Here's the new nut in place and strung up. You'll notice the wound G string!
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And finally, the rear showing the Tusq XL logo. I may still sand some off the top of the nut, so the slots aren't so deep. I only really want the slots to come about halfway up the wound strings, and just to the top of the plain strings.
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Thanks, but the tuning issues with this particular Gibson happens when its Strat-style vibrato system is set up with some "float". If the vibrato is blocked or decked, then the tuning remains solid. In other words: No strings are pinging at the nut when bending the strings.I have the Gibson specs on nut slot width...would that help you???
The first time I replied to the above quote, I said I have tried this. WRONG!!!! I'm such a dumba$$... When I took a closer look at the Gibby, I realized it was a different guitar that I performed some nut molesting, and not this one!Maybe, you could try dressing the slots with nut files or abrasive cord before you go all out with a new nut.

I still scratch in some pencil on all my GUITAR nuts too as SOP, except locking floyds of course.
Did you just recently convert to a wound G?I had forgotten until I changed the G string to a wound G...
Ran across this video. I was always curious how to tell the proper height of the nut slots. The part that shows .006 at high e and .010 at low e seems like good info.