Re: Schaller LockMeister
The new Floyd by Schaller. C-45 high grade steel plate and specially chosen pivot screws and springs.
How tougher than their regular hardened steel tremolo could it be?
http://guitar-tremolo.com/hp316928/Artikel-Liste.htm
The major difference is this Schaller Floyd has a solid hardened steel baseplate, as compared to the old Schaller Floyd, which had a die cast baseplate with hardened steel knife edge inserts. An Oriiginal Floyd Rose, made by Schaller, is all hardened steel.
A Schaller licensed Floyd Rose is slightly different than an Original Floyd rose- it has a smaller baseplate and shorter bolts, making it look less cumbersome. Basically Schaller was allowed in the past to make a Floyd with their name on it, as long as there were design changes- one of them being a die cast plate. Now that Floyd's patents are up, Schaller can produce a unit with a hardened steel base plate.
Many guitar manufacturers used the Schaller licensed Floyd. It's an excellent unit but some people want an all steel trem, like an OFR. Problem is a Schaller is designed slightly different and needs to be mounted 1/16" closer to the neck. If you replace it with an OFR, the OFR might not intonate properly. So this all steel Schallr Lockmeister is great for anyone that has a worn out Schaller Floyd and wants to replace with with a trem constructed like an OFR.
I have a 1989 Jackson Soloist that I bought used. It came with a Schaller /Jackson Floyd. After 21 years, the with a prior owner that never oiled the parts, I have frozen saddle blocks, and saddle screws that are stripped from the die cast base. Schaller eventually fixed these problems, but this new unit seems to go a step further with fixing all long term problems.