Honestly, I wouldn't have tried this but for realizing that the cheap ABR-style Tune-O-Matic bridge on the Cobain Mustang had a (subjectively) better and versatile sound for the kind of music I was playing than the Mustang bridge. However, the ABR sucks balls with whammy, so I started looking for bridges for both guitars to try to make them perfect for me. The Wilkinson roller bridge on the Cobain and now the Mastery on the '73 RI, they both work great and I'm really happy now. I'm really not sure which one I prefer. The Tune-O-Matic gets that tight bridge spacing that makes it feel more Gibson-y but the height adjustment is limited, whereas Mastery keeps it more Fender-y and is more adjustable, but they both improve sound and sustain enough for me that my Strat looks less and less appealing every day.othomas2 wrote:I was surprised how much better (subjective) a modified tunomatic sounded after gauging my ear to the Jaguar nuances...
I reckon the mastery would be just the same albeit the price tag .... and the lesser degree of intonation.
Swings and round-a-bouts...
I'm glad they built it, would love to try one at some point but I'm not going to pay that on an instrument nurtured around generalised subpar (but fantastic) components. Haaa....
I'm drunk.... tried to see how many wanky words I could fit in there... & still trying to make sense.
Resolving, yes, but I don't think anyone truly solved the problem. I love the Mustang as it is, but there's a difference between there being no problem at all with the design, and there being a quirk that you get used to, and I feel like with the Mustang, I definitely got used to the quirks more than I think it's perfect. After I did the electrical tape mod on my Mustang bridge, I honestly hated how "soft" it felt (hard to describe), and I just felt like I ruined the tuning stability even more.Fran wrote:Aye, but people have been resolving the bridge issues for decades. Some dude designs a bridge forty years later, Thurston Moore uses one and half of OSG then its suddenly the bollocks at รยฃ120 a pop. I dont think so.
The mastery bridge epitomizes everything opposite to the reason offset guitars became popular again during the '80's. These guitars were affordable vintage Fenders that kids could rock out on, warts and all.
Even with the Mastery bridge, I know that the tailpiece does not reliably return to the same spot after an upbend as it does a downbend, and I acknowledge as much. However, there's an easy fix for that. Always do a slight downbend manually at the end of an upbend instead of letting it return to rest by itself, but really, I've learned to do that on most trems (since I don't use locking trems at this point) so I'm fine with that. Having the Mastery bridge means that as long as I do this correctly, it's perfectly in tune every time. I think that's worth the price of good pickups for me.
As for the whole SY and OSG thing, people here and there largely like the same guitars. We probably agree about more things than we disagree about, it's just that the disagreements seem bigger when you have a few things you do agree with. Maybe the big philosophical difference (at least as I've seen) is SS likes dealing with problems, and OSG likes paying to fix it, and I find both approaches to be suitable for the right person. Regardless, how many people here are saying I tried the Mastery bridge and it sucked? It's usually more a case of disagreeing with it to the point of not even wanting to try it out, which is fine, but I don't think the cost argument is honestly a very good one, considering it's on par with what American made aftermarket upgrades generally cost.