rockerrocker
New member
Hello everybody, so I got my Floyd Rose set up just the way I like, but I find that when I bend one string, the other strings go down in pitch, so for example if I'm bending one string up a tone and then going straight to a non-bent fret on the next string (while holding the original bend), the non-bent note goes a semitone lower.
Obviously its a case of the extra tension on one string having a knock on effect on the whole bridge and slacken it off. I can't put more tension in the springs because it will throw my action out of whack.
So I pilfer a couple of springs from another guitar and re-set up the trem, this time with 5 springs - more rigidity. It helped the issue a small amount but did not have the effect I was after.
Does anyone know how I can get more rigidity into the trem - basically making it harder to bend 'down' without having to increase tension on the springs? Are there 'extra stiff' springs I can get hold of? If so, what should I be searching for as I don't seem to be able to find anything on google/ebay. Or is this just something I have to deal with (or, more likely, give up on floating trems)?
Any help would be much appreciated.
Obviously its a case of the extra tension on one string having a knock on effect on the whole bridge and slacken it off. I can't put more tension in the springs because it will throw my action out of whack.
So I pilfer a couple of springs from another guitar and re-set up the trem, this time with 5 springs - more rigidity. It helped the issue a small amount but did not have the effect I was after.
Does anyone know how I can get more rigidity into the trem - basically making it harder to bend 'down' without having to increase tension on the springs? Are there 'extra stiff' springs I can get hold of? If so, what should I be searching for as I don't seem to be able to find anything on google/ebay. Or is this just something I have to deal with (or, more likely, give up on floating trems)?
Any help would be much appreciated.