Last week, the weather was very humid. By Friday night, the E and B strings were flat against the frets. Not playable. I know it needs a heat bend and if I lived close by, I'd just drop it off. But I'm dreading having to ship it back. First off, I need to by a flight case. And I really don't want to be without it. It's been my main player lately.
So, I bought a set of Ernie Ball Slinky Light Top Heavy Bottoms (.010-.052), hoping heavier strings would show this neck who's boss. The problem has resolved (for now) and I don't mind the 10's. If I really start to miss the 9's in the next few weeks, I'll have to break down and send it back to Santa Rosa.
These haevier gauge strings are obviously exerting the degree of forward bow that I needed. I'm assuming that this will continue to the point where (by fall/winter), I may actually need to tighten the truss rods a bit. If I get to that point and then switch back to the 9's next spring/summer, will the neck return to where it is now? Or, having started with more relief than when I first got the guitar (thanks to the heavier strings), is it possible that next spring/summer I can return to the 9's and have a playable instrument?
This is difficult to ask in writing. Bottom line: can you PERMANENTLY increase the degree of forward bow with heavier gauge strings, tighten the TR's and start with a new relief baseline or will the neck always find a way return to its original state?