Can you damage the guitar if the vibrato bridge is that high?
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Height of vibrato bridge
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Re: Height of vibrato bridge
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Re: Height of vibrato bridge
Originally posted by Wayne27 View PostDoes the Fender Strat vibrato bridge have to be aligned with the body of the guitar?
New style (two post): it should, for most purposes, be aligned with the fretboard, as a starting point. Fenders often have shims, so the fretboards aren't always perfectly parallel to the body. The only thing moving it changes is how dramatically the vibrato reacts when you use it. Lean the bridge back, and the vibrato reacts more slowly. Lean it forward, and it reacts more quickly. Parallel to the fretboard is the starting point medium.Originally posted by LesStratYogi Berra was correct.Originally posted by JOLLYI do a few chord things, some crappy lead stuff, and then some rhythm stuff.
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Re: Height of vibrato bridge
I don't think you can damage anything, but I'd question why that might be better than just having it level. I'd think that it might be uncomfortable for your wrist, though.Administrator of the SDUGF
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Re: Height of vibrato bridge
I would pull it down considerably just for the fact of not having barely any range of dipping and I'm sure your action is ridiculously high and intonation is out since the saddles are further forward at that extreme angle. IMHO any vintage 2-6 point bridge or Floyd works best level. IMHO The guitar is going to play and sound much better with it setup properly.Last edited by Mr. 80's; 06-27-2020, 12:29 PM.
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Re: Height of vibrato bridge
I totally remember playing my Strat with the bridge like that for awhile before I managed to get it level. That was like 18 years ago!
You might not damage anything now but if that is really your ideal playing position (as in, if that is most comfortable for you) I'm not sure how sustainable that is. Something tells me it puts undue pressure on the trem posts
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Re: Height of vibrato bridge
Originally posted by PFDarkside View PostI too remember having a beginner guitar with a bridge like that, action a mile high, etc...
For me the upper limit is when you can pull an open G sharp a minor third. That puts the B at a major second and the e at a minor second. Cool for faux pedal steel bends.Administrator of the SDUGF
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