My objectives were:
1) Fix a spinning screw(s)
2) Check the guitar ground wires
3) Move the Vibrato Springs to the middle Setting
4) Raise the Pickups after I had raised the bridge before.
![Image](http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51942947959_51501cfa1f_w.jpg)
1) I had one spinning screw on the Vibrato plate though I ended up repairing 3 of them.
I just used the toothpick/qtip fix with some glue and they tighten right up. The screw on the tip of the control plate also needed the same treatment.
![Image](http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51941639397_14672fcc22_w.jpg)
2) I was glad to find that the control plate and the pickups were soldered to vintage ground plates but I was missing a connection to the bridge.
I drilled a hole from the pickup cavity to the tremolo cavity, soldered one end to the vintage ground plates and folded the other striped wire end under one of the bridge thimbles. Now the buzz goes away when I touch the strings.
![Image](http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51941639262_337fb5c017_w.jpg)
![Image](http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51942947799_852986c202_w.jpg)
3) I couldn't get the springs off the Mustang Vibrato posts so I will try it next time I restring the guitar.
![Image](http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51942948079_6e2430ce49_w.jpg)
4) Raising the pickups was super easy and now it sounds better since I raised and loctited the bridge.
![Image](http://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51941639592_74266ef002_w.jpg)
Overall, everything went well and the guitar is playing much better.
It's always a fun afternoon when you get to work on a guitar.