Thom wrote:And I'm sure I've said this before but $179 for a bridge?! Fuck that.
+1
A Mustang bridge costs a fraction of that and does the same job. Or you can just setup the stock Jag/Jazzie bridge, which is time consuming but can be done for only a couple of quid. And it will be just as stable.
theshadowofseattle wrote:less being WOKE
more being STOKED
These bridges have individually adjustable saddles, for height, etc. It allows you to radius the bridge to your liking. try that with an original bridge.
individually adjustable saddles are pretty brilliant, imho. the fact you can space the strings AND adjust the height of them one by one kicks ass. creates more work, too, but i'm cool with that.
it is true that adjusting string height is definitely a bonus, but it can be had for much less that 200 dollars.
i like high action though so it's rare i really feel the need to adjust the height of single strings. if i was into lower action it'd probably be more useful to me personally.
The bridge is no longer the issue, it's not just the G string popping out of the nut when I bend up a whole step between frets 2 and 4. How do I fix this?
Noirie. wrote: you can just setup the stock Jag/Jazzie bridge, which is time consuming but can be done for only a couple of quid. And it will be just as stable.
Not. on. your. life.
theres is no way to setup the stock bridge that will be as stable as the mustang bridge, unless you are modifying the stock bridge in an attempt to emulate a mustang bridge. Maybe if you filed some guitar string sized grooves in the stock saddles and smoothed them out niceley so they didnt chew your strangs to shit. But really how many folks are going to get that just perfect on the first try?
Thom wrote:Sounds like you need to file the nut deeper still...shouldn't be popping out at all.
That's what I thought. The guys at the store I took it to I think thought it was enough, but quiet obviously it isn't. I guess I should have explain I liked to bend strings (shocking, I know). Guess I'll have to wait until I'm back home in March.