astrozombie
KatyPerryologist
are they really all that?
i mean this kind:
what exactly locks?
i mean this kind:
what exactly locks?
Locking tuners do not lock anything other than the "tail" of the string. they do not lock the tuning key in place.
They are primarily a convenience so players do not have to spool 6 inches of string 'round the bobbin.
Read this post twice.
Why do you want to change tuners? According to master luthier Dan Erlewine, 90% of 'tuner' issues are actually nut problems. Do your strings slip when you're playing? You hear that annoying 'ping' just before a string goes out of tune, odds are it's the nut. Have you lubed the nut slots? Once I started doing that, I rarely have to buy any tuners.
If you don't want to spend $60 on locking tuners, the Wilkinson "Ez-lok" tuners are damn good for the price.
+1 to what I6 quoted.
I agree with most of what has been said. On a hardtail guitar the use of locking tuners is not going to solve any tuning issues you have but they do make string changes really really easy. With a trem they should make a difference only if the tuning issues stem from the wraps around a non-locking tuner having a different tension than the rest of the string. As others have said, the nut is the more common culprit for this.
I think they're worth it for the easy string changes alone but maybe I'm just lazy.
Doing the "folded sandpaper under the string" trick to widen the nut slots to my strings solved all my tuning issues...
what trick is that? details please!
Doing the "folded sandpaper under the string" trick to widen the nut slots to my strings solved all my tuning issues. My Squier particularly has some awfully cheap tuners yet they hold the strings fine... winding/stretching the strings properly, a bit of graphite in the nut slots and the tuning is rock stable, vintage trem set to float and everything.
Locking tuners are convenient and practical, but they're not a solution to tuning issues, unless you don't know how to wind them correctly on the tuning posts, and that's assuming the nut is well cut, because that's where most tuning problems begin, and usually end too.
You wrap a piece of sandpaper halfway around the string and use it like a file. It'll make the slot as big as the string + the width of the sandpaper. It's a quick way to widen the slots without a file.
I love locking tuners. Like everyone says, you still need a properly cut nut, but I think they make tuning more stable regardless. Even if they don't, it's worth the money just for ease of string changes. I use them on my hardtails too.