Hi,
I'm picking up my Les Paul 60's tribute again.
But I was wondering if I need a roller bridge (Gotoh, Stewmac),... now since It has a B7 Bigbsy on it.
Would a Mustang bridge be a solution ? I've never seen one on a LP...
I've been thinking of trying to fit the Tune-O-Matic on my Mustang and maybe the
rounder Mustang rollers could do it any good? (If it 'll all fit ofcourse, with extra tape or not)
Silenus wrote:Oooh that "Wilkinson Ultimate Roller Bridge" has some fine looks...
I like that one. Will it fit directly or does it need adjustements ?
You may need to fit the new posts. But they may screw right in? I've had some work and some not in the past. It's likely it'd just screw straight in though.
Yes, the wilkinson roller bridge with the locking studs that GFS sells is nice. I put one on one of my guitars. It also has lots of room for adjustment.
Silenus wrote:Hi,
I'm picking up my Les Paul 60's tribute again.
But I was wondering if I need a roller bridge (Gotoh, Stewmac),... now since It has a B7 Bigbsy on it.
Would a Mustang bridge be a solution ? I've never seen one on a LP...
I've been thinking of trying to fit the Tune-O-Matic on my Mustang and maybe the
rounder Mustang rollers could do it any good? (If it 'll all fit ofcourse, with extra tape or not)
Thanks for any advice
.
Nice, very Neil young
Fender Classic Player 60’s Stratocaster>East Coast T1 Tele>
Epiphone Les Paul SL>Ovation 12 String acoustic>Peavey Strat DIY Relic
Marshall Origin 20H>James’s old purple 2x10
Marshall MG10 Combo
The Wilkinson will fit, the regular cheapo GFS roller TOM will not as it's Epiphone/import spec. Even the new bushings to take the large post would require some drilling/reaming. Be careful when buying hardware for US Gibsons to buy US spec stuff. Imperial vs. metric plus Gibson vs. copy = a lot of room for error.
You don't need a roller with a Bigsby, though it does reduce friction over the break angle at the saddle, which can reduce string wear/breaks. It does not cause the trem to work drastically better or more efficiently or anything.
Nice guitar, not big on black LPs but it looks better with the soapbars and bigsby.
Aug wrote:which one of you bastards sent me an ebay question asking if you can get teh kurdtz with that 64 mustang?
robertOG wrote:fran & paul are some of the original gangstas of the JS days when you'd have to say "phuck"
Thanks for all those tips and such...
If I'll change it, my mind is set on the Wilkinson for now.
So, a TOM will also have different radius on my Mustang = bad idea?
Also have another lil problem with it: the neck PU has a lot less volume then
the bridge PU (even after string-height compansation).
Should I check the wiring or can it be something else?
Yeah, that's what I meant with string height compensation (English not my first language so must have said it wrong)
but the bridge PU is a beast in comparison with the neck PU.
The difference is so big it's like you stamp on a pedal if you switch between 'm.
I know the neck is supposed to be softer/mellower sounding but the volume is also a lot less.
Maybe I'll have to check all the wiring during he weekend...
Silenus wrote:Yeah, that's what I meant with string height compensation (English not my first language so must have said it wrong)
but the bridge PU is a beast in comparison with the neck PU.
The difference is so big it's like you stamp on a pedal if you switch between 'm.
I know the neck is supposed to be softer/mellower sounding but the volume is also a lot less.
Maybe I'll have to check all the wiring during he weekend...
Pictures are blocked at work so I can't see the guitar, but are the neck or bridge pickup a replacement? Could be a higher-gain pickup replacement, but it could also be the wiring. Had an SG a while back with a bridge pickup that hardly worked in comparison to the neck pickup. COULD NOT get it to work, after going through and resoldering all the bit I suspected it might be. So I took it to a tech, five minutes, fixed.
No, there all stock P90s.
I can do the soldering myself but I don't like to do it on Les Paul's
'cause it's kinda narrow in there
(and don't want to take it all out)
You don't need to change bridges. The TOM will work fine with the Bigsby. I have a pinned TOM on my Gretsch and I wouldn't use anything else - intonation is spot on and I don't have any tuning issues after using the Bigsby, and the way I play (heavy Bigsby use) you'd think I would. The trick is to make sure your strings are properly stretched when you change them - that means you grab your strings one by one and stretch them, then tune them, then stretch them again, then tune them again until they are stable. The second thing you do is make sure that your nut is cut properly and you should also lubricate the slots with graphite or silicon every time you change strings. That's all - that TOM is perfect for a Bigsby, don't change it.