Strange, one of my messages disappeared !
I post it back :
To present ? I do know alot of 70s and 80s rock fans, but I'm interested to knowing what you're thinking about with the "present" rock, hard rock, as I'm alot into 90 / 2000 "underground" alt rock which not that popular
But here's something you'll surely like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxQzIPrNapo
Back to our initial subject,
It's great that you're a tremol-no user, so you really know what you're talking about
So it has no impact to the vibrato in floating mode, right ?
And once locked, it REALLY locks the vibrato ?
------
Yes I want a pic man that'll be great.
I gave you a pic in one of my posts of the beast too, maybe you can tell me if I have to do that by seeing it ?
OMG you did that, man
I have a recessed bridge too I think, in my beast...
Without the hole, it really can't go far ?
@Gtrjunior Hey knew you'll digg it man, check out their other songs !!
OK I'll forget the tremsetter than. Thanks for your honesty, I'll make more researches then
@devastone Thanks for the confirmation. I'll think more about it before making a decision
I have other questions about the Tremol-no btw, if ever someone knows about these
When it is blocked, I can tune my guitar either half / full step down OR up ? Without any problem with the neck / intonation / action, floyd rose etc ?
If it ever happens after a while that one of my fine tuners is in max position but the string is still not tuned, can I block the floyd with the Tremol-no, tune the guitar from the mechanics, setting all the fine tuners to middle, then relock and release the tremol-no in floating, and that working perfectly without having to reset the floyd ?
D Tuna needs to be decked or you will have tuning problems. When you pull the D-tuna out to detune your guitar, the reduction in string pressure causes the bridge to tilt back towards the body a little it. That causes all of the other strings to go sharp. If you are just playing by yourself at home it may not bother you. If you play live with band, the tuning problem will be very noticeable.
I use this little brass thing to stabilize the D-Tuna on my EVH guitar. It goes in the trem spring area on the back of the guitar and presses against the tremolo block. You adjust it tight against the block to keep the bridge from tipping back when you tune to D, and then tweak the trem spring screws just a little tighter so that the bridge doesn't pull up when you tune back to E. It is a bit of pain to set up, but it is cheap and it works great.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Tremolo-St...661881?hash=item19ef0b0f79:g:N-IAAMXQatBSbwMh
@ Gtrjunior, that Ping Floyd is really nice! Is the logo laser etched into it? Appears to be. I like that look....
Are those still in production I thought they quit making them? I just got rid of a set of Ping tuners yesterday so thats why your trem caught my eye.
There are 2 solutions besides blocking the trem.
A tremsetter and the tremol-no. The tremol-no would need to be in hardtail mode though.
My Pitch Shifters don't require routing and there's one made specifically for Ibanez Edge tremolos.
View attachment 94135 View attachment 94136
I had no idea that existed.
Very cool.
I’m assuming it works on a regular Floyd as well as the edge trems?
If I’m understanding correctly, the actual fine tuner of the Floyd is used to get the final adjustment instead of the tiny allen screw in the EVH tuna?Thanks! Yes, there is one just for Floyds'. The top pic shows one on a Ping Floyd. Here's a demo video on an Ibanez RG but the setup is the same for Floyds' too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfXQvzBKWPU
... and this is why I’d keep one in standard and one in drop D. If I only had one guitar, I’d figure out how to do everything in D.
That's right, no allen keys to fine tune or lose.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfXQvzBKWPU
I have some Custom Shop made in the USA versions listed on Reverb for the Edge and Floyd.
Ibanez Edge "IE" https://reverb.com/item/17062581-tone-vise-pitch-shifter-for-ibanez-edge-tremolos-2018-black
Floyd Rose "FR" https://reverb.com/item/17175546-tone-vise-pitch-shifter-fr-2018-black