STRATDELUXER97
Stratoblaster Tone Meister
Curious to see what you all prefer...I'm not normally a vibrato bar user and get most of my vibrato from my fingers...Some of my strats float about 1/8" off the body,but the others are on the body...
Slammed down like a hard tail. I used to have mine set up to float and it stayed in tune really well but I don't find myself needing it that way now. In fact, my main players don't even have a tremolo on them (just realized that.. ha).
Interesting issue for me.
I was in all kinds of bands and gigged a lot between 1999 and 2004. I was out playing somewhere damn near every weekend during that time.
I only had one guitar - a 1996 American Standard Stratocaster, so it went everywhere and did everything.
Anyways, it was set up floating from the local store I bought it from, and it stayed that way from 1996 (when I got it, before I was playing out) until about 2002.
In my peak gigging years between 1999 and 2002, I really was playing almost every weekend, I had 2 and sometimes 3 bands, and this guitar was getting used for every minute of all that.
The guitar sounded the best in those years.
Until 2003, I had no idea what anything on the guitar did except the volume knob. I am not kidding, I barely knew what the pickup selector switch did. Talk about good life before the information age - I was very, very focused on music and very, very UNfocused on gear or tone. I just moved the switch until it sounded right for the song. I remember I had my 2 tone knobs set at 7 and 4, all the time, from the day I got my first amp until about 2003. Again - I didn't know what the knobs did, but the guitar sounded "right."
Around 2003, the internet was a little more prominent, and I happened upon information that I was previously not privy to - SRV's 5 trem springs and huge strings, rewiring tone pots to control different things, etcetera - it was all Greek to me, but I was reading it, so I started to wonder if I could make my Strat sound better.
I started tweaking - I added trem springs, I put on 13-56 strings, I hardtail'd it, I put on 9-42 strings, I soldered, I desoldered, I turned the truss rod this way, I turned the truss rod the other way. Saddles up, saddles down. I was just messing with it.
Anyways, since about 2003 (almost 10 years ago, damn) the guitar hasn't been right. I recently read my own review of the KGC brass trem block where I stated "In the case of my guitar, it's not very good in the first place for some reason, so my guitar went more from "ug" to "OK" than "good to great."
It wasn't always that way. People used to play my Stratocaster and say "God DAMN."
I'm not using hyperbole here, it used to be that guitar that another guitarist would pick up and their face would kind of freeze, like someone was whispering a secret to them, and then look at me like, what is this thing? It was supernaturally good. It was my guitar soulmate, and that's why I lived with 1 guitar for 10 years - I didn't need another one, I had the one.
So in about 2003 I "broke the seal" on what I now realize was an absolutely magic setup, and hardtail'd my vibrato. Since then, I have set up probably 10 guitars from scratch, each of which felt remarkably better than before, but for some reason, this Strat has never felt right since I first "disrupted" it.
It really feels like an "Eve in the garden of Eden" thing for me. There was an age of innocence, but it was far too short and it's gone now.
So I have set the trem up floating a few times since 2003, and every time, it feels awful, intonates awful, buzzes even with high action, and is just all around awful, so I always end up hardtailing it again and doing my best to set it up well.
I just built a guitar in my garage completely from scratch that I set up to play incredibly. I pieced together another from an unfinished body and neck, and it also plays great. I know that I know how to do setups - I have done many, and never had one stump me. Except my former #1 Strat.
I don't even have a #1 anymore. I have 10 guitars in my house and none of them is my favorite - likely because I miss how good that Strat once was - that is what a guitar should feel like and sound like.
But it's never felt good or sounded good since I've hardtailed it. It's just that I can't seem to set it up floating to save my life.
-Hunter
Floating...thats the way Leo designed and IMHO thats the way it works best...
I think they stay in tune better that way and I find more musical uses for them set floating.
I used to just float it with no real thought about it until I saw this:
After I saw that I put in the time, and it does take time to make it work like Carl's but the pay off was SO worth it!
The vibrato part of the clip starts just before 3 minutes...
Curious to see what you all prefer...I'm not normally a vibrato bar user and get most of my vibrato from my fingers...Some of my strats float about 1/8" off the body,but the others are on the body...
^^ That's friggin interesting...I've never set up a trem like that before, with an angled claw. Gonna have to try doing that. Would be a lot easier if you could somehow measure the tension being exerted on the stretched strings/springs