I think Kahler has lost their minds

And a good luthier will minimize that friction, and teach a good player how to take care of his system so it's never a problem.

Never having owned one (but have used plenty), why were they sold with a behind-the-nut string lock? Was it just because locking tuners weren't very common back then? Were those locks just not needed?
 
Never having owned one (but have used plenty), why were they sold with a behind-the-nut string lock? Was it just because locking tuners weren't very common back then? Were those locks just not needed?

Locking tuners were around in the eighties, but they were still extremely niche. And, of course, Floyd Rose still had a patent on a locking nut proper.
 
https://reverb.com/item/14908403-go...CheckoutMailer#notify_buyer_purchase_complete

Bought this yesterday as ive needed one for a long time. Our vacation plans this year fell thru for now and the Mrs, let me spend.
The German all steel FR are going for $200 to $400 which is insanity.
I bought 3 push in style FR upgrade bars the last couple months and each was $30+ bucks.
The new GOTOH has the upgrade bar that both push-in and screws.
Prices on everything are up and won't go back just like taxes.
 
Never having owned one (but have used plenty), why were they sold with a behind-the-nut string lock? Was it just because locking tuners weren't very common back then? Were those locks just not needed?

It was popular to have string locks because of Floyd.
Also, if you're going to dump the bar all the way, a string lock will allow the pitch to drop a little lower as compared to no string lock. Seems odd to me, but I could never quantify the reason.
 
They are great tremolos. Kahlers have a very smooth action. They require less maintenance and tweaking than a Floyd Rose. It is unnecessary to block the tremolo to keep it from going sharp. String changes are fast and easy; no tools are required. I am not saying they are better than an FR or any other tremolo simply; many users prefer the Kahler for these and many different reasons.

I'm not doubting you, and I admit I'm operating from a sample of exactly one; I had a Dean years ago that had been built for Derek St. Holmes, and it had a Kahler on it. It's not that it wouldn't STAY in tune, it's that it was nearly impossible to GET in tune. I was new to trems back then, so admit it could have been user error to a degree, but I worked on that thing for months and never got it right.

Larry
 
These days we have locking gears, and can dispense with the nut locks.

Locking tuners don't fix the stability problems caused by friction that occurs at the nut. Locking tuners are fine, and can work in a pinch but will never have the same tuning stability as a locking nut. The locking nut eliminates a friction point.

The Kahler behind the nut locks had all the disadvantages of just using locking tuners in addition to all the disadvantages of a Floyd nut. Total fail.
 
Locking tuners are fine, and can work in a pinch but will never have the same tuning stability as a locking nut.

Not true if the setup is properly done. My Vintage Icon is equipped with a Wilkinson VS100 and locking Grover - NEVER a tuning problem, ever. A lot of people thought they could make it go out of tune - they were wrong.

The Kahler behind the nut locks had all the disadvantages of just using locking tuners in addition to all the disadvantages of a Floyd nut.

As long as you could set the string height on the nut before you installed the Kahler string lock, there wasn't a problem. On Floyds you can never get every string just right. The diecast parts just aren't that well made.
 
https://reverb.com/item/14908403-go...CheckoutMailer#notify_buyer_purchase_complete

Bought this yesterday as ive needed one for a long time. Our vacation plans this year fell thru for now and the Mrs, let me spend.
The German all steel FR are going for $200 to $400 which is insanity.
I bought 3 push in style FR upgrade bars the last couple months and each was $30+ bucks.
The new GOTOH has the upgrade bar that both push-in and screws.
Prices on everything are up and won't go back just like taxes.
They'll go back. Just not in our lifetime.

Sent from my SM-A115A using Tapatalk
 
Locking tuners don't fix the stability problems caused by friction that occurs at the nut. Locking tuners are fine, and can work in a pinch but will never have the same tuning stability as a locking nut.

I have locking tuners on 4 tremolo guitars. 2 Babicz, Kahler and Bigsby. Two with traditional nuts and two with LSR nuts. I don't have any tuning issues with any of those guitars.
 
Also, if you're going to dump the bar all the way, a string lock will allow the pitch to drop a little lower as compared to no string lock.

Dude, it's more than a little lower. I'm still blown away when I flip the bar around, dump it completely so the strings are falling off the neck, then having it go perfectly back in tune.

For a very short time, I owned some solid body Ovation with a Kahler. I loved that Zakk Whyle 10-60 string set at the time, and the .060 wouldn't fit in the saddle. That killed it for me.
 
Does Kahler still recommend the behind-the-nut lock? It seems like with today's roller nuts and graphite and locking tuners, they would abandon the lock altogether.
 
They still offer several versions for sale, but I don't think they include them with the system anymore. Basically - same as Floyd Rose. You buy the trem you want, then choose the locking nut you want.
 
I quite like the cam system on the Kahler and the fact that you can adjust the string height individually. What if it used the Floyd saddles system behind the cam, together with the fine tuners? Or viceversa, implement Kahler's cam with the individual string height adjustment system on the Floyd Rose, the spring retainer screwed into the body on the Floyd, Gotoh, Edge etc is pretty trashy and substandard compared to the rest on. Combined with the locking nut it'd have to be the best trem in terms of stability and usability.
Ah patents...
 
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