I find it's the TOM on my KC. My old Mustang and my Jagstang were/are much more stable. I think the strings just catch on the TOM, and I'm going to install a roller bridge when I get round to it.gusman2x wrote:Yeah, i used a lot of lead from a propelling pencil on the nut slots, and also the bridge slots.Fakir Mustache wrote:^ did you put some kind of lubricant on the nut? You need to do that.
I will screw the cigar tube down a bit more though. There's still a few mm before the strings make contact with bridge behind the bridge.
It's definitely a ton better, but it's nowhere near as stable as my jag or jm.
Dream becomes true
Moderated By: mods
- Golden_Sonic
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- Location: Italy
Well, who is Mad Mike? I've seen that some peolpe talk about him here on shortscale: he must be a genius in setting mustangs/offset guitars...
-Guitar: Squier VM Mustang, Squier CV '50 Duo Sonic;
-Amplifier: Hughes&Kettner Blue Edition 60;
-FXs: Dunlop Cry Baby GCB-95 Wah, Boss BD-2 Blues Drive, Proco RAT, Danelectro Cool Cat Tremolo, EH Small Clone, MUZA FD900, Bespeco Volume pedal.
-Amplifier: Hughes&Kettner Blue Edition 60;
-FXs: Dunlop Cry Baby GCB-95 Wah, Boss BD-2 Blues Drive, Proco RAT, Danelectro Cool Cat Tremolo, EH Small Clone, MUZA FD900, Bespeco Volume pedal.
He was a member on the Jag-Stang forum. I don't know if he has an account on ss or osg. His jagstang even had emgs in it if I remember right. He did something with luvricating the nut, springs, saddles, and the spring tension.Golden_Sonic wrote:Well, who is Mad Mike? I've seen that some peolpe talk about him here on shortscale: he must be a genius in setting mustangs/offset guitars...
Congratulations! Your Punkacc9 evolved into Awstin.
[youtube][/youtube]
Other videos on his channel are helpful too.
Other videos on his channel are helpful too.
Last edited by Mo Law-ka on Wed Mar 19, 2014 6:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
jcyphe wrote: Mo is the most sensible person in this thread.
icey wrote:and thats for the hatters (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
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i can not understand your problem with the kc mustang, i have with a tunomatic and mustang like trem both works very well.Thom wrote:I find it's the TOM on my KC. My old Mustang and my Jagstang were/are much more stable. I think the strings just catch on the TOM, and I'm going to install a roller bridge when I get round to it.gusman2x wrote:Yeah, i used a lot of lead from a propelling pencil on the nut slots, and also the bridge slots.Fakir Mustache wrote:^ did you put some kind of lubricant on the nut? You need to do that.
I will screw the cigar tube down a bit more though. There's still a few mm before the strings make contact with bridge behind the bridge.
It's definitely a ton better, but it's nowhere near as stable as my jag or jm.
and the seymour duncan jb makes a stang go waaaaang.
You didnt try the guitar before you bought it?
- theshadowofseattle
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For sure i did, but i never really find that trems are set up well in the shop. I also understood that most players do not use the mustang trems due to their perceived short comings. But now i want to try.weeping_moon wrote:i can not understand your problem with the kc mustang, i have with a tunomatic and mustang like trem both works very well.Thom wrote:I find it's the TOM on my KC. My old Mustang and my Jagstang were/are much more stable. I think the strings just catch on the TOM, and I'm going to install a roller bridge when I get round to it.gusman2x wrote: Yeah, i used a lot of lead from a propelling pencil on the nut slots, and also the bridge slots.
I will screw the cigar tube down a bit more though. There's still a few mm before the strings make contact with bridge behind the bridge.
It's definitely a ton better, but it's nowhere near as stable as my jag or jm.
and the seymour duncan jb makes a stang go waaaaang.
You didnt try the guitar before you bought it?
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I can tell you. Anyway for my playing i dont need the regular mustang system. Fuch i even play the american mustang.gusman2x wrote:For sure i did, but i never really find that trems are set up well in the shop. I also understood that most players do not use the mustang trems due to their perceived short comings. But now i want to try.weeping_moon wrote:i can not understand your problem with the kc mustang, i have with a tunomatic and mustang like trem both works very well.Thom wrote: I find it's the TOM on my KC. My old Mustang and my Jagstang were/are much more stable. I think the strings just catch on the TOM, and I'm going to install a roller bridge when I get round to it.
and the seymour duncan jb makes a stang go waaaaang.
You didnt try the guitar before you bought it?
Guitars have to be set-up on a case by case basis, no two are exactly alike and even different tolerances/wear on metal bits and who installed them, and how, make a difference. Then there's and personal setup preference and playing style/technique to take into consideration.
A lot of Mustangs and Jag-Stangs don't stay in tune with plenty of researched attention given to their setup. The trems on most MIM/Squier Strats I've tinkered with wouldn't setup right for me.
A lot of Mustangs and Jag-Stangs don't stay in tune with plenty of researched attention given to their setup. The trems on most MIM/Squier Strats I've tinkered with wouldn't setup right for me.
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"
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This! personal setup preference and playing style/technique to take into consideration.paul_ wrote:Guitars have to be set-up on a case by case basis, no two are exactly alike and even different tolerances/wear on metal bits and who installed them, and how, make a difference. Then there's and personal setup preference and playing style/technique to take into consideration.
A lot of Mustangs and Jag-Stangs don't stay in tune with plenty of researched attention given to their setup. The trems on most MIM/Squier Strats I've tinkered with wouldn't setup right for me.
But i cant agree, mustangs and jag-stangs stays in tune at least for me. i have 3 with the same original setup and it holds for me.
But then i agree most Squiers arent for me playing without doing something to them. Tuners or bridge.
And i dont like most of the stock pickups (mustang, jag-stang, strat or whatever) so i just change them.
weeping_moon just said that!
- Golden_Sonic
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So I've finally tried to set up the dynamic vibrato of my Squier Mustang with the help of a friend, without success; that's what we've done:
1) We have lowered the bridge and raised all the saddles in order to obtain a low action (NOTE: now the strings don't touch the two edges of the bridge);
2) We have removed the plate-bridge to check what kind of tension the springs had: they were already placed on the hardest tension, as Fakier suggested me;
3) We have lowered a little bit the wraparaound/stopbar/cylindrical bar (you know, that part of the bridge through which the strings go);
4) last, we have lubrificated the nut with graphite.
It seems that all this works have been useless: the guitar goes out of tune after a short time you play it. What should I do now? Any suggestion?
1) We have lowered the bridge and raised all the saddles in order to obtain a low action (NOTE: now the strings don't touch the two edges of the bridge);
2) We have removed the plate-bridge to check what kind of tension the springs had: they were already placed on the hardest tension, as Fakier suggested me;
3) We have lowered a little bit the wraparaound/stopbar/cylindrical bar (you know, that part of the bridge through which the strings go);
4) last, we have lubrificated the nut with graphite.
It seems that all this works have been useless: the guitar goes out of tune after a short time you play it. What should I do now? Any suggestion?
-Guitar: Squier VM Mustang, Squier CV '50 Duo Sonic;
-Amplifier: Hughes&Kettner Blue Edition 60;
-FXs: Dunlop Cry Baby GCB-95 Wah, Boss BD-2 Blues Drive, Proco RAT, Danelectro Cool Cat Tremolo, EH Small Clone, MUZA FD900, Bespeco Volume pedal.
-Amplifier: Hughes&Kettner Blue Edition 60;
-FXs: Dunlop Cry Baby GCB-95 Wah, Boss BD-2 Blues Drive, Proco RAT, Danelectro Cool Cat Tremolo, EH Small Clone, MUZA FD900, Bespeco Volume pedal.