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Golden Gate F-3303 Slide Guitar Conversion – Extension Nut

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$19.95

$ 8 .99 $8.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Conveniently change back and forth from having the instrument set up for fretting or for steel bar playing
  • Fits simply and non-obtrusively over the top of the guitar's regular nut
  • Sturdy brass construction accommodates a wide variety of string gauges
  • To learn more, please see our Product Description below


This handy device can instantly convert any steel-string acoustic guitar for Hawaiian playing. Simply place this metal string-raiser over the existing nut and tune up the strings. You've saved the expense of buying another guitar for slide playing, and you need only remove this part to convert your guitar back to Spanish playing again.


Lochlan Longstrider
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2024
This fits the Fender-style, sloped, set-in nuts that the Grover extension will not. However, it is more unstable because of that. I folded up a small piece of shelving rubber to place under it as a gasket and that helps with some of the buzzing. Not really a pro fix, that would be a tall custom nut. I thought I would have to file deeper slots into the metal but the string tension seems to be holding after a month with the shallow and uniform slots. No variation in slot width or depth.
Pitbull Reviews
Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2022
I have several of these at all times available for rapid transit to high slide mode. This one provides a differentheight than the one I get from my local music shop and in many instances is more useful.Sure, it is possible to play slide with normal string height. If your name is Eric Trucks. But for us mere mortals, it is helpful to raise the action and this does the trick. Takes about one minute plus a bit of tuning time. Perfect cheap product to take your guitar playing to new heights!
Wes Burgess
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2021
In extension nuts, the competition is between this Golden Gate Accordion Accessory F-3303 and the Grover Perfect Guitar Nut GP-1103 (search Amazon). This is a quick review to show what you get -- I will add listening tests later if there is more you should know. The Golden Gate Accordion nut extender is a simple piece of bent metal. The description says it is brass, but it is attracted to a magnet and it looks like steel to me. What looked in the photo like grooves through the metal are actually shallow indentations cut into the surface. Installation is easy — just loosen the strings, slide the Accordion Accessory over your existing nut, and presto — you have a lap steel guitar you can play with a slide or tone bar. However, the strings will probably be too high for you to fret the guitar.The following is a list of positive and negative features, especially compared with the competition:PROS:1. this product came very quickly.2. it is easy to install and very sturdy.3. It will probably fit more guitars than the Grover Perfect Nut.CONS:1. there are sharp edges on my GG Accordion Accessory nut that could damage my guitar. These must be fixed.2. the string grooves are narrow and shallow and do not hold the strings well -- the low E slot may need to be filed to keep the string from slipping off.3. The GG Accordion nut rests in front and back of the existing nut. That means that your intonation across the neck will no longer match the underlying frets. By comparison, The Grover Perfect Nut fits tightly over your guitar’s nut and mostly preserves the intonation. That may not matter if you play slide mostly by ear.OVERALL This nut may work for you, but you should compare it with the Grover Perfect Nut before buying.HELPFUL TIPS:1. I suggest that you round off the sharp edges wherever the Accordion Accessory will contact your guitar, if you don’t want to leave a mark. I did that and wrapped the edges with bluetape to protect my neck and peg head. It will only take a minute.2. If you are unsure of the fit, you can measure your guitar: the Accordion Accessory is about 1.9 in wide (about 1.66 in between the E strings) — if the Accordion Accessory is a little wider than your nut, you can probably live with that, but you may not want the strings to extend far outside the edges of your neck.Have fun with your guitar!
Jesús Francisco García Reyes
Reviewed in Mexico on December 29, 2020
Este adminículo permite que la guitarra normal de cuerdas metálicas, afinándola en una forma distinta a la habitual, adopte el sonido de una guitarra "hawaiiana" o de un resonador y se pueda emplear para ampliar la versatilidad en estilo "country" o "blues", en la modalidad de técnica "bottleneck". Gracias a éste, el sonido es claro y muy bueno en ese sonido.
Jerry D. Rhoades
Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2019
...but some instruction on the best way to put it on the guitar would have been appreciated. Even a picture.
Vinny
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 5, 2018
This is great! But you have to realise what it is and how to use it. The longer side goes behind the nut ( headstock side) - it’s for lap steel so if you want to play standing up in open D with a slide, shim your nut with a business card, this is not for you.This will raise your action to 4mm off off the first fret - you also need to raise the bridge at the 12th fret so the action is 5mm or 6mm. That’s because the tone bar weighs down on the strings. Use a tone bar not a regular slide.Remember it’s not permanent and take care once fitted not to knock it from the side. It will move. It’s also wider than the average fretboard. This does not matter at all. The neck is for tension the frets are for reference. It’s wil play fine.Fit it with a set of Nashville strings fitted in the following order (not the way you normally fit Nashville strings) bass to treble :26, 18, 14, 12, 10, 9And tone to low C6 as follows - bass to treble:C E G A C EYour guitar is now a lap steel in standard lap steel C6 tuning so bring in the Hawaii or Country style lap steel guitar.Your regular electric guitar fitted with this nut, action raised as above, tuned to open C6 with Nashville strings will sound exactly like a real lap steelHere’s a demo of how to use it to vonertbyour guitar into a lap steel:https://youtu.be/ixT-7aHzWtg
ron clayton
Reviewed in Canada on September 9, 2015
Thanks for asking. Yes it's a brilliant item and works just as I had hoped.. Very easy to install as I just slackened all the strings (no need to remove them) and inserted the Golden Gate. Took all of 5 minutes..Cheers,RC...
Bardetis Daniel
Reviewed in France on March 24, 2015
mauvais, car espacements trop larges, rainures pas assez profondes, passez votre chemin !! allez voir sur Ebay, il y a mieux
grant jefferies
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 23, 2014
A cheap and safe way to raise the action for slide players without permanently altering your guitar. Exactly what I was looking for!
HappySarod
Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2013
I have a Simon and Patrick S&P 6, from 1999, and I wanted to see if I enjoyed playing lap style guitar. I play Hindustani (North Indian Classical music) and eventually am thinking of getting a mohan veena (a type of modified lap steel guitar). I viewed this as a way to try out playing lap style playing before getting a more expensive instrument.The first nut extension I tried was from a local music shop, and it looked like it was made in a mold. I've seen a similar model on Amazon, but I cannot say for sure whether it's the exact same one I found locally.This is overall a better nut than the molded kind. I found, comparing the two, there is a slight bit more sustain with this than the molded nut. I'm not sure if that's due to the material, or the fact that one may be making more/less contact with the nut or the fingerboard, or some other reason.I'm pretty impressed that such a simple and elegant part really helped out my guitar.
JPfromOH
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2010
The Golden Gate F-3303 is intended for extending the nut on resonator guitars that are ordinarily set up for fretting. In other words, this is a device that allows the player of a round neck resonator to set up the instrument for square neck-style lap playing. With this extension nut, the player can change back and forth from having the instrument set up for fretting (or a combination of fretting and slide playing) or alternately for steel bar playing. The buyer needs to realize that although the extender simply fits non-obtrusively over the top of the guitar's regular nut, you must slacken the strings in order to make the switch. In other words, it's not something that you're going to be able to do in between songs at a gig. However, the Golden Gate is very sturdy, seems to fit a wide variety of string gauges, and changes the guitar's intonation set up very little. Do note, though, that because changing the angle of the strings from bridge to nut also changes the length of the scale ever so slightly, tuning the open strings perfectly in tune means that the frets will not mark 100% precisely where the touched notes need to be played. Since so much of slide playing relies on the ear and not on precise visual placement of the bar directly over the frets, it is not a problem. This device is ideal for the players who plan to do, say, some Delta blues with a combination of fretting and use of an over-the-finger slide (normal, short nut setup), and then maybe work on Bluegrass lap-style resonator playing in the future. It's not for someone who is going to change set up hour by hour or day by day. The only way you could probably do that would be to own two instruments. If you don't need to make quick, frequent setup changes and don't want to own two resonator guitars, the Golden Gate F-3303 does the trick! At less than $10 compared with the price of a second resonator guitar, it's a no brainer.