
Okay, it's finally complete. I went through 3 vibrolas before I found a good one that wasn't made of mild steel. I ended up having a half dozen pickup rings made to get a decent price. If you recall, the outer dimensions are humbucking size, and the inner dimensions are mini-humbuckers. I have too much time and too much money in this project to make a profit - but at least it's done.
It looks great, sounds terrific, and plays great.
If the neck join is stronger than a Gibson Firebird, it's probably a much better player.
Well - I strung it up with 10's and got the action nice and low. The body is super light, making it neck heavy on a strap. Once I put my right arm on the body it was stable. The Gibson pickups sound great - lots of bite, even on the neck pickup. Plays well, neck is narrow - feels like a 70's SG. The Bigsby doesn't work for ****, barely any response. Maybe a roller bridge would help, but it looks nasty to me on this thing. This guitar could be gigged right now, no problem. That white pickguard must be in another box in my storage unit. I'll go dig it out once it warms up a bit.
Bigsbys aren't known for dramatic trem effect
Having nothing else on the bench right now, and since the new parts I ordered are still enroute, I thought I'd glue some of the splinters back together on this thing (the photo shows me clamping the mahogany back together in the bridge pickup rout). Also, I noticed this has been refretted. Whoever did the job didn't cut the frets the exact length sometimes and there are small gaps on one end or the other - not quite reaching the binding (It's tough to be consistent). I'll take care of it and then polish out the frets. Also, decided the restore the factory bone nut by repairing all the cracked edges and surfaces with the old CA/baking powder technique. Should look acceptable once completed. Where are those damn parts?
Like any other piece of gear, it depends on how much time you spend with the Bigsby. A Floyd bends pitch, a Bigsgy bends pitch, how much pressure you put on the bar is the only difference, one takes less work.
Why not refret and run the frets the entire width of the fretboard (clipping the tang and run the crown over the binding)?
There is a HUGE difference in the amount of pitch change you can get with a Bigsby vs a Floyd. Even if you could put the Bigsby bar down to the face of the guitar the pitch is only going to be a tone or so lower, and not much increase in the pitch without dropping the spring out. With a Floyd you can make the strings go completely limp and as high as you want.
I think this guy is using his Bigsby in a fairly aggressive and dramatic fashion.