T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
825.1 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:34 | 4 |
| Yes to a small degree and that is why most locking systems have
the fine tuners on the bridge.
dbii
|
825.2 | Can't have a locking nut without a tuning bridge | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Wed Sep 07 1988 10:55 | 4 |
| You absolutely need a bridge with fine tuning if you have a locking
nut. It's not optional.
db
|
825.3 | Time to buy a new trem tooooooo | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Big Wilbur will get YOU!!! | Wed Sep 07 1988 13:15 | 16 |
| I totally agree! Fine tuners with a locking nut are imperative.
I once (ONCE) bought a nice Aria guitar that had a knife edge trem
and locknut, but no fine tuners. I got it home and had the same
problem you (Tony) are now experiencing. It went directly back
to the store for a refund.
What happens is that the strings pass through the locking nut at a
slight angle, on most guitars. This causes them to pull up sharp when
the nut is locked down (because the strings have to stretch to fit flat
in the nut). Because of the varying diameters of the strings, the
higher strings will be more sharp than the lower ones. It's a real
pain.
Greg
|
825.4 | Elaboration | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Wed Sep 07 1988 17:21 | 28 |
| I think there's a point that hasn't been made clear.
I'm not sure why you felt you had to have a locking nut. Presumably
it was so that your trem bar would stay in tune.
But see the thing is, that a "locking trem" is really a SYSTEM
that includes:
o A locking at or behind the nut
o a tremolo bridge with fine tuners and usually rollers
If you have a the bridge, but not the locking nut, you will
be able to tune it, but using the bar aggressively will still
cause the guitar to go out of tune.
If you have a locking nut but not a brige with fine tuners,...
well... you've seen why that won't work (can't tune the guitar).
So the point is that the proper bridge without a locking nut
doesn't buy you very much, and a nut without a proper bridge
makes the guitar almost useless.
So you have to either get a proper bridge, or not lock
the strings with the locking nut (i.e. the locking nut was
a wasted effort).
db
|
825.5 | | SUBURB::DALLISON | welcome to the jungle..... | Thu Sep 08 1988 05:57 | 11 |
|
re-1
I got a lock nut to *try* to keep the pup in tune.
Thanx the the help, its a bummer! I'll have to ivest on a new system,
when I find the ���.
Cheers,
-Tony
|
825.6 | Locking tuning pegs? | PIWACT::JMINVILLE | Only a fool would say that | Thu Sep 08 1988 09:20 | 11 |
| There are tuning pegs out there someplace that you can actually
lock the string into when you wind it on (there's a screw inside
the peg that tightens against the string). I don't know the name
of the company that makes them or if they're available as an "after-
market" type of thing. This approach might be a lot less expensive
than buying a trem unit to go with your locking nut. I think the
company is Spurzel (or something).
Mark Jacques help me out here??
joe.
|
825.7 | There are excellent inexpensive alternatives | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Sep 08 1988 10:15 | 15 |
| Note that you don't necessarily have to by a bridge with a trem bar.
There are normal (non-trem) bridges available with fine tuners for
much less money than the typical trem bridge.
For example, there's one in the 1988 Carvin catalog for $36.95.
Whereas I think things like Kahlers and Floyd Roses start at well
over $100. I've used a guitar with this bridge and the tuners
on it are much smoother than than Kahlers or Roses. It's no
cheapo bridge (you can adjust the intonation and string height
of each string individually if I remember correctly).
db
db
|
825.8 | Addendum de dum | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Sep 08 1988 10:20 | 14 |
| Oh one more thing.
Although I'm still unsure of your motivations ("to keep the pup in
tune" doesn't tell me if you meant to have a guitar that stays in
tune when using the trem bar, or just to have a guitar that stays
in tune), I should mention that putting a nutlock on a guitar with
a "normal" trem bar (one that doesn't have rollers) is not going
to accomplish much either. It will be "better" but it will NOT
stay in tune. I may not have made this clear in my past replies.
Point is that to get a trem bar that stays in tune, you need a nutlock
AND a trem bar with fine tuning and rollers (or an equivalent design).
db
|
825.9 | | SUBURB::DALLISON | welcome to the jungle..... | Thu Sep 08 1988 13:07 | 10 |
|
I wanted the guitar to stay in tune *all* the time (doesn't everybody
??) ie, when using the whammy and when I'm not using a whammy.
> Point is that to get a trem bar that stays in tune, you need a nutlock
> AND a trem bar with fine tuning and rollers (or an equivalent design).
Yeah, I gathered that.
-Tony
|
825.10 | Sperzel Locking tuners | ANT::JACQUES | | Thu Sep 08 1988 14:00 | 49 |
| re .6 Joe is right, Sperzel tuners are a good alternative to
locking nuts. With a normal tuner (precision or not) you have to
have 2-3 turns of string around the post. The way the Sperzel
works is on the back of the headstock, the tuner has a thumbwheel
that you turn which drives a pin up and down inside the post.
To string the guitar, you back off the thumbwheel, insert the
string through the hole in the post, pull the string snugly
so there is no slack in the string, then tighten the thumbwheel.
Once you do this, you tune to pitch. The end result is that only
about 1/4 - 1/2 turn worth of string is wrapped around the post.
This eliminates slippage at the headstock completely. I believe
this is superior to locking nuts because 1. It makes it easier
to change strings and tune the guitar. 2. It is not as radical
an installation job as installing a locking nut. Most locking
nuts require you to drill all the way through the neck, or they
require that you use fairly large wood screws into the top of the
neck, neither of which is very kind to a neck. The nut area of a
neck is the most fragile part of any guitar, and drilling and/or
screwing into this area can easily weaken a neck.
You would be surprised how well a stock Strat tremelo works with
these tuners installed. It may be a good idea to also change the
nut to a graphite nut to eliminate friction when using a tremelo.
Installation of these tuners requires the usual amount of hacking
associating with changing from stock tuners to precision tuners
(the holes in the headstock have to be enlarged to accomidate the
larger post, and a small hole must be drilled into the back of the
headstock, for each tuner, to accomidate a pin which prevents the
tuners from spinning or moving.
I am assuming that once a person installs a locking nut, there is
no going back to the stock nut due to the holes which have been
drilled into the neck. It is unfortuneate if someone goes through
this much work and expense only to find the locking nut was the
wrong choice to begin with.
I installed Sperzel tuners on my Telecaster which, of course, is
non-tremelo, but I was planning on replacing the stock Fender tuners
with Schallers or Grovers, and I figured I might as well go with
the Sperzels anyways. As a result, my Telecaster stays in tune so
well, I only have to tune it once a week or so. I plan to eventually
get a hipshot string bender for it, and I am sure that having the
locking tuners will pay off when it comes time to use the string
bender.
Mark Jacques
|
825.11 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Thu Sep 08 1988 14:59 | 5 |
| Schaller now offers locking tuners and via Stewart McDonald's
they're quite a bargan compared to the local price for Sperzals...
dbII
|
825.12 | And Den Dum | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Sep 08 1988 18:08 | 23 |
| Note however, one problem that locking tuners do not fix (and locking
nuts do) is the problem of pulling strings thru the nut. Unless
you keep you nut well lubricated with graphite or whatever, eventually
the nut will pinch the string as it's being bent (or released) and
not let go when it's released.
Installation of locking nuts is a pain. However, it's a one-time
thing. I haven't found changing the strings on a nutlock equipt
guitar to be significantly painful in anyway. It's an extra 10
seconds or so for each string (assuming you get one with a flip
tab, not one that requires Allen wrenches).
I.E. a locking tuner is (as it was described), a good alternative
to locking nuts, but it's important to note that it will NOT work
as well as a locking nut, but it may work acceptably.
BTW, I would recommend locking nuts even for guitars w/o trem bars
(but WITH bridges with fine tuning of course). I rarely use the
trem bar on my Carvin but even so, it stays in tune much better thru
normal use (particularly string bends) much better than my friends
Carvin who does NOT have a locking nut.
db
|
825.13 | Not necessarily rollers | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Big Wilbur will get YOU!!! | Fri Sep 09 1988 00:07 | 7 |
| re: db ...trem with rollers...
A Floyd Rose has no rollers, you are of course referring to a Kahler
or similar? My Charvel with Jackson (modified FR) stays in tune
very well, even with heavy trem (ab)use.
Greg
|
825.14 | | SUBURB::DALLISON | welcome to the jungle..... | Fri Sep 09 1988 05:31 | 11 |
|
I was lucky - the holes I had to screw in the neck were *very* small.
I'll remove the locknut and get a new truss-rod cover thingy, and
the damage will not be noticeable.
Can anyone give me an indication as to the price of the locking
tuners.
Thanx in advance,
-Tony
|
825.16 | Wanna see some of my catalogs? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Sep 09 1988 09:08 | 13 |
| > You always gotta have that allen wrench available.
Not true. Nowadays locking nuts that don't require ANY tools
are readily available. With these kind of nuts, the extra
time to change a string is on the order of about 5 seconds per
string: 4 seconds to thread it thru and about one second to flip
the tab after you've tuned it. That's about the same order of
time as a locking tuner, maybe even less.
Using the latest stuff, locking nuts really aren't a pain at all and
they are usually much cheaper than a set of new locking tuners.
db
|
825.17 | Price of Sperzel's | ANT::JACQUES | | Fri Sep 09 1988 09:33 | 15 |
| re .14 I paid $50.oo for my Sperzels. They are mini in-line.
I believe the 3-on-a-side (Gibson style) are the same price. The only
place I know of that carries them is Hamel Music in Chelmsford,Ma.
They are available in Gold, Black, and Stainless (not quite as
shiny as chrome). Mine are black.
If that is too expensive, look into the Schallers as db2 stated.
If you are not in Massachusetts, you can find Sperzel's address
in an earlier note, and order them direct. Do DIR/TITLE="SPERZEL"
to find the note.
Good luck,
Mark Jacques
|
825.18 | Anarchy in the U.K. | CLBMED::JMINVILLE | Only a fool would say that | Fri Sep 09 1988 09:47 | 7 |
| Mr. Dallison is in the U.K. Where is Sperzel located? If they're
a U.S. company, maybe someone could call and get the name of a
U.K. distributor?? Or, if they're a European company, then maybe
someone can send the phone number to Tony so he can call and get
info. about a local distributor.
joe.
|
825.19 | see note 460.3 | ANT::JACQUES | | Fri Sep 09 1988 09:55 | 2 |
| See note 460.3 for address.
|
825.20 | | SUBURB::DALLISON | welcome to the jungle..... | Fri Sep 09 1988 11:22 | 9 |
|
RE.18
Hey, thats a great idea Joe. If anybody has got and address/phone
number of a U.K. distributor/supplier, please post it here.
Cheers,
-Tony @Reading, England
|
825.21 | I'll fix this for you once and for all... | BOEHM::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Fri Sep 09 1988 11:51 | 13 |
| All of this discussion brings to mind a story I once heard from
my music teacher in Jr High School. She was giving trumpet lessons
to a kid who had a terrible time getting the thing tuned up. One
day at the end of the lesson he asked her to tune it for him
before he left, so she adjusted the tuning slide until it was perfectly
in tune. Imagine her surprise when the kid showed up for the next
lesson and she found out he had taken the trumpet home and had his
father *weld* the tuning slide in place.
The kid might have been a lousy musician, but he probably turned
out to be a great engineer.
- Ram
|
825.22 | ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Sep 09 1988 12:40 | 12 |
| re: .21
Perhaps there's a similar approach for keeping a guitar in tune.
I heard that Eddie Van Halen solders his strings. Maybe this is
how he manages to give his whammy such abuse and yet stay in tune.
But how do you change the strings once they're soldered to the guitar?
;-)
db
|
825.23 | May be he... | HOFNER::MELENDEZ | | Fri Sep 09 1988 12:47 | 2 |
| Ref: -1 How about he changes the guitar?
|
825.24 | every 12,000 notes, whether it needs it or not | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Fri Sep 09 1988 13:38 | 5 |
| It always amazes me when I see someone walk into a music store and
ask to have their guitar tuned (happened just a few weeks ago).
/rick
|
825.25 | If ya can't tuneit, ya probably dunno when its outa tune anyway | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Sep 09 1988 16:17 | 12 |
| re: .24
Me too! I see it happen a lot.
What makes this so surprising is that it would seem to me that the
ability to detect that a guitar is out of tune should just about
imply the ability to be able to tune a guitar.
My latest gig is teaching kids, and tuning is my first lesson and
not one student has ever had any problem with that.
db
|
825.26 | Roll With It | FGVAXX::MASHIA | Crescent City Kid | Tue Sep 13 1988 11:25 | 9 |
| Re nuts:
I was in a music store last week, and noticed a "special edition"
Strat (don't recall the actual designation), that had special pickups
and a nut that consisted of six individual rollers on a shaft. The
idea was that the strings could simply roll instead of stick. Seemed
like an elegant solution to me.
Rodney M.
|
825.27 | New strats | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Back in Black | Tue Sep 13 1988 15:28 | 6 |
| If I remember right, that's the "Strat +" model.
Regardless of the name, it also has the locking tuners. I played
one awhile back, just briefly, and liked it.
Greg
|
825.28 | need help with nut repair | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Play deep... | Fri Jan 11 1991 09:33 | 7 |
|
I am restoring an old guitar and the g string has a buzz on the first
fret which I am pretty sure is due to the groove in the nut being too
deep. Is there a way I can fill the slot and re-groove it?
Thanks,
-pat
|
825.29 | Bone it! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Walking the path of ToneQuest | Fri Jan 11 1991 11:51 | 14 |
| The way it's normally done is to remove the nut and shim it up a little
higher.
You can also file off some shavings from the top of the nut and stick
it into the slot and hit it with some super glue and then recut/file
that slot.
If it's not a nice bone nut (or other high quality material), then
don't even bother trying to fix it or shim it up, replace it! A bone
nut blank will only cost about $2-$3 and it's WELL worth it! It would
probably only cost you about $15 to have a repairman replace it for
you.
Greg
|
825.30 | thanks Greg | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Play deep... | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:14 | 9 |
|
Hey Greg I just got back from the guitar shop and they told me the
same thing about the filings and super glue. They even gave me a
small amount of bone shavings - looked like we were doing a dope deal!
How long should it dry before restringing? If that don't work, I'll
take it in. You should see this guitar/project. 25 years old! My
folks got it for me when I was in 4th grade! It's a Jap made Kingston.
Has a maple neck, rosewood f/b, and one monster single coil. The tuners
were shot too, but I got some replacements. Cranked!
|
825.31 | Another way to save the original nut | CSC32::MOLLER | This is a computer isn't it? Why not? | Fri Jan 11 1991 14:13 | 13 |
| Another option is to buy some of the 2 ton white epoxy mix, and dab
some in the groove (it should be cleaned with the edge of a tissue
and a cleaning solution - I like to use the spray cleaner that
Radio Shack Sells that leaves no residue - don't use the stuff
with the added lubricant). Don't use the 5 minute epoxy, it shrinks
over time & you'll definatly be sorry that you used it (as things
will start falling apart in about a year). Get some fret files
(Stewart McDonalds sells them for about $10.00 each) and take your
time. I usually use a piece of fret wire that has had the tang
taken off (wire cutters and a file with do this just fine) and
hold it up against the nut so I don't cut too deep.
Jens
|
825.32 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Play deep... | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:20 | 9 |
|
Hey everbody, the nut repair process worked *great*. Well, OK, I
did have have to re-do one slot because I cut it too deep the
first time. I used the "nut powder" and mixed it with krazy glue.
After sanding and filing, it looked *perfect*. This Kingston
has awesome action now and no buzzes. Yay-ya. Thanks to Greg and
everybody else too.
-pat
|
825.33 | Should've been playing the Nutcracker | KOALA::RYAN | The only good snow is melted snow | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:09 | 8 |
| Displaying my equipment ignorance - the nut on my bass (Epiphone
hollow-body) broke yesterday, I couldn't find the piece that broke
off. Someone referred to a "nut blank" - is this how they usually
come (and it's up to me to sand and file to the right configuration),
or can nuts be bought ready-to-install in various widths/heights/
number of grooves?
Mike
|
825.34 | Nuts! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I claim, therefore I am! | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:29 | 14 |
| Mike,
Nuts made of good materials (bone, Corian, graphite, Micarta) typically
come unslotted and only rough shaped. You have to cut them to size,
sand, cut the slots, and polish them yourself. You can typically have
a new one installed by a luthier for about $20 or so. Depending on how
much you value your time, it may be worth it. It takes me at least an
hour or so to do one nicely. It also helps if you have the special
tools (sized nut files that leave a rounded bottom on the grooves).
You can often find cheap plastic nuts pre-slotted and sized, but I
wouldn't put one of 'em on any instrument I own!
Greg
|
825.35 | Sorry in advance! | SWAM3::SEIDMAN_ER | Sadam, This SCUD's for You | Thu Feb 14 1991 16:15 | 4 |
| re: -. last couple
Not to mention painful ;^)
|
825.36 | | KOALA::RYAN | The only good snow is melted snow | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:23 | 6 |
| Thanks for the info. Someone else told me they have no
problem with the cheap plastic nuts, and since the bass
isn't particularly good (and I'm hoping to get a new
one some time this year), I'll try that solution.
Mike
|