Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
tremelo/whammy bar
Hi All,
I want to fit a tremelo arm unit to a solid body guitar. i do not want to dig holes. is there a tremelo unit that is surface mounted? the guitar is copy of a prs
with two pickups, then a bridge and then the string captivator ( whatever its called)
Thanks,
Annie.
I want to fit a tremelo arm unit to a solid body guitar. i do not want to dig holes. is there a tremelo unit that is surface mounted? the guitar is copy of a prs
with two pickups, then a bridge and then the string captivator ( whatever its called)
Thanks,
Annie.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by annieigma. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Google seems to suggest that such items aren't widely available but US-based RTO Custom Guitars have taken out a patent and will produce them to order (which, regrettably, suggests that they won't be cheap!):
http://www.rtoguitars...-done-with-style.html
Chris
http://www.rtoguitars...-done-with-style.html
Chris
I think that Bigsby is the only whammy bar that you can fit without cutting holes. Pretty much all other whammy bars are modelled after the Strat type which involves a moving block, with adjustable tensioning springs inside the guitar body.
http://www.bigsby.com/vibe/products/vibratos/
http://www.bigsby.com/vibe/products/vibratos/
I don't know what model guitar you have , it may be easier to replace the bridge unit with one that has a tremolo arm capability rather than fit a Bigsby to the body , but in any case I would take it to your local music instrument shop and see what they say - this is probably better done by the professionals than a layman/laywoman .
"it may be easier to replace the bridge unit with one that has a tremolo arm capability"
Your then back to the problem of finding a bridge unit that doesn't require cutting a hole in the guitar.
In fact, as the OP's guitar is only a copy, the cheapest and simplest option is probably to trade it in for a copy that already has a a tremolo arm. eg, a Squire Strat
Your then back to the problem of finding a bridge unit that doesn't require cutting a hole in the guitar.
In fact, as the OP's guitar is only a copy, the cheapest and simplest option is probably to trade it in for a copy that already has a a tremolo arm. eg, a Squire Strat
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