Silence Kid
New member
Re: Locking Nut or...?
Not the nut itself falling out of the guitar; the strings falling out of the nut. An LSR is quite shallow, so there's an opportunity for strings being unable to seat back in the nut. Perhaps a Wilkinson would work somewhat better? Don't those have an integral retaining bar as well? It's been a while since I used one; I know those are troublesome nuts anyway, compared to the LSR.
Your point about wrapping is the point I was trying to make; if you want lesser break angle on the treble strings, locking tuners give you the opportunity to eliminate the wraps. On the flip-side, tuners like Spertzels might not even have enough room for any wraps at all on the post though, and so you'd be losing that "adjustment."
But wrapping the string can allow you either increase or decrease break angle. I wrap the low strings up the post and the low string down the post for all my in-line 6 guitars.
As for the previous comments about roller nuts, why would it fall out of place if the strings were slacked? You still glue it in like a normal nut.
Another thing to consider BriGuy, if you go for the roller nut it's also a good idea to get roller string trees. There should be as little friction as possible between the tuners and the bridge.
Not the nut itself falling out of the guitar; the strings falling out of the nut. An LSR is quite shallow, so there's an opportunity for strings being unable to seat back in the nut. Perhaps a Wilkinson would work somewhat better? Don't those have an integral retaining bar as well? It's been a while since I used one; I know those are troublesome nuts anyway, compared to the LSR.
Your point about wrapping is the point I was trying to make; if you want lesser break angle on the treble strings, locking tuners give you the opportunity to eliminate the wraps. On the flip-side, tuners like Spertzels might not even have enough room for any wraps at all on the post though, and so you'd be losing that "adjustment."
