midnite_man
New member
Re: Strap-locks..
That could've been caused by not having the screw all the way down in the hole of the button so that the locking part with the ball-bearings seats all the way into the receiving part of the lock. Again, unless the screw that comes with the locks is the same diameter/size that's already in the guitar, the screw from out of your guitar will usually have to be ground down to be completely countersunk into the locking button when tightened down. Since I wasn't there witnessing the event as you did, I wouldn't know for sure. If the bearings actually fell out of the locking stem, it's hard to say why that would happen and could've been a result of improper installation.
"Fear" is not the issue. Adding unneccesary goop to the look of your strap was part of what I was getting at, goop that I personally wouldn't want to look at every time I snapped my strap onto my favorite guitar. If you want to spend the time to clean the stuff off should you eventually want to change straps....hey, by all means, go for it. I only use leather straps on all my guitars....and leather will eventually wear out. In my life, I've only used the blue loc-tite while putting together car-engines and it works great for that. I wasn't even aware there was "red" loc-tite. Thanks for that info!
For installing Schaller strap-locks I've always and only used pliers and/or visegrips to facilitate a good, strong securement that's never let me down yet.
I've never had Dunlops fail me either, and all you need is a pair of pliers and a screwdriver to install them.
Both products work great, IMO; with proper installation, maintenance, and usage as the key.
Whichever one you decide to use, they are definitely a good piece of insurance to invest into.
....Bob
Skarekrough said:I witnessed a Dunlop Lock bearing failure during a gig with my old band. Mid-song he just totally lost the neck of the strap and had to finish the song without it. It took some duct tape to get it so he could finish the show.
That could've been caused by not having the screw all the way down in the hole of the button so that the locking part with the ball-bearings seats all the way into the receiving part of the lock. Again, unless the screw that comes with the locks is the same diameter/size that's already in the guitar, the screw from out of your guitar will usually have to be ground down to be completely countersunk into the locking button when tightened down. Since I wasn't there witnessing the event as you did, I wouldn't know for sure. If the bearings actually fell out of the locking stem, it's hard to say why that would happen and could've been a result of improper installation.
Skarekrough said:Loctite doesn't marry you to a straplock, it just makes it secure. Removal of the Loctite gunk is easy enough to do. Loctite is meant to keep nuts secure on bolts, that's what it does. And the almost 20 year success on a strap that I've done hundreds of shows with is a testimony to that. I'm not sure why you fear the stuff so much; it does exactly what you want a straplock to do; keep things in place through a decent amount of vibration and outside force.
"Fear" is not the issue. Adding unneccesary goop to the look of your strap was part of what I was getting at, goop that I personally wouldn't want to look at every time I snapped my strap onto my favorite guitar. If you want to spend the time to clean the stuff off should you eventually want to change straps....hey, by all means, go for it. I only use leather straps on all my guitars....and leather will eventually wear out. In my life, I've only used the blue loc-tite while putting together car-engines and it works great for that. I wasn't even aware there was "red" loc-tite. Thanks for that info!
For installing Schaller strap-locks I've always and only used pliers and/or visegrips to facilitate a good, strong securement that's never let me down yet.
I've never had Dunlops fail me either, and all you need is a pair of pliers and a screwdriver to install them.
Both products work great, IMO; with proper installation, maintenance, and usage as the key.
Whichever one you decide to use, they are definitely a good piece of insurance to invest into.
....Bob