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Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

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  • 80's_Metal
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    I'd buy them if they were $29, but not $60.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mincer
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    It just seems like overkill for something you'd set once or twice and forget about it. If you want to add mass, get a bigger block.

    Leave a comment:


  • Gtrjunior
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    I’ve tried these. For the intonation aspect hey work fine. But the issue I had was that they interfered with the full travel of the fine tuners.
    With the fine tuner screw inside the groove, the hollow point contacted the underside of the whale tail so it prohibited the adjustments full range of motion as you loosened the fine tuner.
    I ended up taking them off.
    I had them installed on an OFR.

    Leave a comment:


  • Chistopher
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Originally posted by Shredda Riff View Post
    This might be a bit older of a thread but I don't care. I've read through this entire thread astonished at how it seems 99% miss the entire point. First, if $60 bucks is to expensive to justify get another hobby and a new job! Regardless of it being a little easier or not to set the intonation, you are adding mass to the bridge and it will add sustain and tone. Some of you are going to say it will be miniscule, well it all adds up. Several tiny mods making a miniscule of difference suddenly become a major difference. Not to mention I'm willing to bet for many that miniscule differe3nce is how good of an ear you have verses the difference it made in the first place.
    Who's to say the change in tone will be a good one? If I had an issue with my tone and $60 bucks to play around with, mods to the intonation adjustment on my Floyd Rose would be at the bottom of the list. I could change magnets, string type, and pot values and get five times as far for a fifth of the price.

    Leave a comment:


  • nexion218
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Has anyone in here ever dealt with Black Cherry USA? I admit I'm a sucker for trying out gadgets and a few days ago I decided to give these a whirl. If nothing else, they will look cool. Only problem is that I have not received any sort of confirmation from them after payment and no response for my e-mail inquiry either...

    Leave a comment:


  • Shredda Riff
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    This might be a bit older of a thread but I don't care. I've read through this entire thread astonished at how it seems 99% miss the entire point. First, if $60 bucks is to expensive to justify get another hobby and a new job! Regardless of it being a little easier or not to set the intonation, you are adding mass to the bridge and it will add sustain and tone. Some of you are going to say it will be miniscule, well it all adds up. Several tiny mods making a miniscule of difference suddenly become a major difference. Not to mention I'm willing to bet for many that miniscule differe3nce is how good of an ear you have verses the difference it made in the first place.

    Leave a comment:


  • dave74
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Originally posted by BloodRose View Post
    True Dave74. to each his own I guess. But yeah, Im pretty used to floyds, so prolly is more beneficial to a new user..
    I've been on floating trems exclusively since my first real metal guitar, a brand new 91 Rhoads-Pro in metallic-black with the Jackson hardware/pickup set.
    But it wasn't until the mid 2000's that I really started caring enough to begin learning and noticing all of the idiosyncrasies of the Floyd system.

    Before that I'd take it in for new-tuning setups and intonation set. But then when strings would start stretching and the bridge would drift from exact, and then the intonation would suffer do to the action change form the bridge being not quite parallel, and then ect..,..lol

    Anyways, after being so unhappy with others setting up my guitar I decided it was time to really dive into it. pi

    Leave a comment:


  • BloodRose
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    True Dave74. to each his own I guess. But yeah, Im pretty used to floyds, so prolly is more beneficial to a new user..

    Leave a comment:


  • dave74
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Originally posted by Coma View Post
    I think it's a nifty idea. Probably more useful on OFR, Schaller, Gotoh or similar where the saddle screw is located directly under the string. Modern Ibbys have them set to the side, IIRC, so I imagine intonation isn't as much of a hassle then.
    The thing is though (with a standard OFR or any Ibby), that in order to move them you need to loosen the string floopy anyways, especially to move it accurately backwards in micro-increments, and when you do it makes no difference at all that the screw is right under the string.

    If after slackening the string a bit you simply use your left hand's middle finger at the front (neck-side) of the saddle to brace it so that when you loosen the screw it's easy to control back or forward slide,,,,,,and just keep your middle finger there until you re-tighten the screw with the right hand.

    The old system is already perfect for any well-seasoned floyd guy.
    That said, these will likely make things easier and more accurate for those not-so-seasoned floyd guys, and non-floyd techs trying to setup a floyd.


    My point= Great product for some,,,,,,complete waste of money for others.
    Last edited by dave74; 01-22-2017, 06:33 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Obsessive Compulsive
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    I think it's a problem solver. It's hard to achieve accurate intonation on Floyd Rose saddles without a wrench like that on a Strat bridge. It's not cost prohibitive either. EVH D-Tuna costs about the same and all it does is tuning down the low E to D in an instant. Same thing with brass block or granite block, it costs like 100 bucks but the benefit is bogus.

    Leave a comment:


  • Coma
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    I think it's a nifty idea. Probably more useful on OFR, Schaller, Gotoh or similar where the saddle screw is located directly under the string. Modern Ibbys have them set to the side, IIRC, so I imagine intonation isn't as much of a hassle then.

    Leave a comment:


  • metalchurch79
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    These would be helpful while doing a fresh setup on a guitar, but aside from that I personally couldn't justify the price to use them once and then forget about them.
    They do look pretty cool though and they have that JT-6 vibe as mentioned.

    Leave a comment:


  • BloodRose
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Yeah, cost is prohibitive unless the benefit would be good. I already have my floyds set up with big blocks and Ti saddles and trinkets to help sustain and all. Was wondering if there is much benefit to the adjusting? doesnt sound like much, if any. I also agree with what was said that they are reminiscent of the JT6

    Leave a comment:


  • KeeperOS
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Actually had my eye on them for a while, I actually planned to get them for my Swing EZ-10, the route was meant for a Schaller-type Floyd so the Gotoh one I've put there is longer than the route.

    Never could justify the cost though...

    Leave a comment:


  • darthphineas
    replied
    Re: Floyd Rose Hollow Points??

    Originally posted by greekdude View Post
    all this hassle for a marginally more controlled manner of moving the saddle back and forth? Just think that you will set intonation 1-2 times in the life of the guitar. Only real use I can find is when the screw's threads get damaged then the mechanism will hold the saddle in place.
    ^^^ this ^^^


    for what they are intended to do, I'm having a hard time seeing the value. been using a FR over 30 years, so that aspect would offer very little improvement in the speed of the process.

    I've wondered if that since they are brass components to it, if they would increase sustain. I've read some reports that suggest it might not be the case.

    I think if API hadn't jumped on marketing them for FR that they would've fallen off the radar long ago.

    Leave a comment:

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