Re: Goin home to doctor another one... Trem claw question..
Whoa, I can't picture a way of dealing with the trem claw without messing up the floyd setup but hey, I'm no guitar tech.
When I removed the entire floyd, or replaced springs, I used to cut a small piece of wood the exact size needed to get the floyd perfectly leveled with the top when inserted behind the block. String the guitar, tune up (stretch strings if needed) and check the action. The string tension should hold the wood block in position and the whole thing should be leveled and playing well. Then I put the claw back on and screw it enough to be able to put the springs without effort, making sure the claw is parallel with the cavity walls. Then I flip the whole guitar so the spring cavity is facing the floor and then I start to tighten the claw screws half a turn one at a time to be sure the claw is going parallel with the cavity walls. I keep going for a while until the wood block falls down on it's own. That's when you know that the spring tension is (hopefully) enough to keep the floyd leveled with the strings in tune. Lock the nut, finetune and it should be ready to go.
I used to use two or three wooden tongue depressors stacked and glued together to hold the floyd in place. Those are easy to sand to the required width. I placed them on the lowest part of the block (farthest from the floyd baseplate).
Oh yea, that's for full floating floyds. I've never messed with a dive-only mounted one but should work the same.