That's a roller bridge of some sort. Is that an Epi LP? That didn't come from the factory like that then.
it's a Wilkinson roller bridge.
wilkinson has a reputation for good design and solid durability.
as long as it does what it's supposed to, and sounds good doing it, it's just fine.
If I recall, Agile ToM bridges are interchangable with Epiphone bridges. Therefor, the Tone-Pros that would fit Epiphone would rock on that thing.most probably, yes. I'm not sure about the post spacing or the diameter of the posts themselves, but it can probably fit something like a nashville TOM or a Tonepros or something along those lines.
best bet is to just measure everything and see if it matches up with an aftermarket tuneomatic.
If I recall, Agile ToM bridges are interchangable with Epiphone bridges. Therefor, the Tone-Pros that would fit Epiphone would rock on that thing.
None of them make their own hardware and most of them conform to the same spec. It's rare that I've seen an import spec ToM-type bridge from anybody not drop onto pretty much every import guitar that needs that type of bridge.Seriously?! I thought that Agile was a Korean made guitar company that used different part dimensions and weird crap like that.
None of them make their own hardware and most of them conform to the same spec. It's rare that I've seen an import spec ToM-type bridge from anybody not drop onto pretty much every import guitar that needs that type of bridge.
This is what you'd need if you went TonePros.
http://www.tonepros.com/lpm02-tonepros-metric-tuneomatictailpiece-set-large-posts/
You could change out just the bridge, but it looks like the studs may have been replaced. That will probably just require unscrewing the current studs and screwing in the new studs, not pulling the entire pushing.Would I have to change out ALL those pieces, or would I just be able to change the bridge itself?
You could change out just the bridge, but it looks like the studs may have been replaced. That will probably just require unscrewing the current studs and screwing in the new studs, not pulling the entire pushing.
Well, if the bridge works, keeps in tune, and sounds good then I'd say nothing needs to be changed.Im not sure what all was done to this guitar before i bought it. I bought it used from guitarcenter.com used section and had it shipped to me....It seems to have been set up before since the intonation and all that is correct and it plays great.....I just had never seen this style bridge.
Well, if the bridge works, keeps in tune, and sounds good then I'd say nothing needs to be changed.
Roller bridges tend to end up on guitars where people feel they may have tuning issues or have a trem on them (Bigsby, Les Trem, etc.) since the string gets dragged across the saddle and most ToM-type sadles come to a sharp point and don't move, so the string can get caught up and not return to pitch correctly.