Basically, I'm in a mood for tinkering... :laugh2:
Currently my Strat's trem is set to floating with 3 springs, with 3 semitones up pull on the G string. I use 10-46 guage strings, and the bridge is the one that comes with an American Standard strat.
Would there be any advantages, tonally or otherwise, to increasing the number of springs to 4 or 5? Would double stops stay close to in tune with more springs? I'm assuming more springs=more stability, but the trem is still floating so I don't know if that's a fixable problem...
Is there anything I should be aware of when using the trem with so many springs? Could I damage the neck in any way if I was to use the trem a lot with 5 springs?
I want to keep the bridge floating, but I rarely use the full upwards pull I have at the moment. I don't do anything 'extreme' on this strat trem like divebombs etc, but I do use it quite a bit within a few semitones range downards, and one, sometimes but rarely two semitones upwards.
Thanks in advance
Currently my Strat's trem is set to floating with 3 springs, with 3 semitones up pull on the G string. I use 10-46 guage strings, and the bridge is the one that comes with an American Standard strat.
Would there be any advantages, tonally or otherwise, to increasing the number of springs to 4 or 5? Would double stops stay close to in tune with more springs? I'm assuming more springs=more stability, but the trem is still floating so I don't know if that's a fixable problem...
Is there anything I should be aware of when using the trem with so many springs? Could I damage the neck in any way if I was to use the trem a lot with 5 springs?
I want to keep the bridge floating, but I rarely use the full upwards pull I have at the moment. I don't do anything 'extreme' on this strat trem like divebombs etc, but I do use it quite a bit within a few semitones range downards, and one, sometimes but rarely two semitones upwards.
Thanks in advance