marshallmel
Well-known member
Looking at a Luxxtone but it has a non locking Floyd. The old school style with no locking nut or fine tuners. How is the tuning stability on these things??
According to the spec sheet Jerry had this one set up with 9’s. I use 10’s and I’m guessing the nut slots would need attention with the change in string gauge. Thanks for the input.Tuning stability is about the same as any other 2 post trem. The nut will still be your biggest struggle with keeping it in tune. Some guys sem to be able to keep a non-locking trem in tune all night long, and that becomes part of their playing technique and others look at a non-locking trem wrong and it goes out of tune immediately. Then again, a Les Paul is the same for me. I can't keep one in tune long enough to record a single take of a song and I watch other guys play the same Les Paul all night.
This guitar just has a bone nut and no locking nut.Thing is, back in the day you were supposed to use the locking nut despite the lack of fine-tuners. If you get it in tune when clamping the lock nut it´s as stable as the later, standard Floyd. That´s how Brad Gillis and the other few earliest adopters did it.
It already has staggered locking tuners.I would at least add locking tuners, and yes the nut may need some attention if you go with 10’s..
How does that work? You tune it but then locking the nut usually throws at least a couple strings sharp. With no fine tuners how does one compensate? Trial and error by tuning those particular strings a bit flat before the nut gets clamped down?Thing is, back in the day you were supposed to use the locking nut despite the lack of fine-tuners. If you get it in tune when clamping the lock nut it´s as stable as the later, standard Floyd. That´s how Brad Gillis and the other few earliest adopters did it.
Yes. I have a regular OFR Charvel that does this…I’m so used to how the G/B string react when I lock it that I leave those TW a little flat. Lock it and I usually don’t have to touch the fine tunersHow does that work? You tune it but then locking the nut usually throws at least a couple strings sharp. With no fine tuners how does one compensate? Trial and error by tuning those particular strings a bit flat before the nut gets clamped down?
How does that work? You tune it but then locking the nut usually throws at least a couple strings sharp. With no fine tuners how does one compensate? Trial and error by tuning those particular strings a bit flat before the nut gets clamped down?