I thought i meantioned it. But i do adjust the spring claw. My problem is it takes many turns of the screws to get it where it looks good, and i dont know of its normal to have to turn them that much. Like everyone says it takes alot of trial and error. But i just want to play my guitar again and stop fussing around.
Ahh, sorry I must've missed it. Yes, you need to adjust the tension via the screws as much as needed to get the strings in balance, up until you bottom out the screws - that means that you need more spring tension (via more springs or higher tension springs).
Take for example my two Floyd based guitars: The first one is tuned in E standard with 10-46 strings. This provides a certain amount of tension. In this guitar, I have two springs and the claw crews only have a few threads left sticking out of the guitar body. The second one is tuned in drop C with 11-56 strings. This combo requires three springs with the claw screws in a similar location. Note that the distance between the trem block and the claw is different in both guitars, so the E standard guitar gets a bit more room to stretch (roughly 3 1/2" of spring length, stretched vs 3 1/4" for the drop C guitar).
In any case, this is all to point out that you need proper opposing tension to get the bridge level to whatever string tension you have with your preferred tuning.
I get that you want to just play and not fiddle with your guitar - but the trick is, as others have pointed out, is that once you get it set and stable, it stay that way. If you want to change the strings, it's easy - just change one string at a time and bring to pitch, stretch, bring to pitch, rinse repeat for all strings. If you keep the tuning and the string gauge the same guess what? The spring tension never needs to change - it should be the same!
Now, if you want to say, oil your board, and need to take all the strings off, the only reason you need to block the trem (in cases where it's fully floating), since the springs will have no opposing force, is so the floyd doesn't drop out and damage your guitar. Remember, if your claw stays in the same place, and your springs are the same, and nothing else is changing about that spring tension, then everything should go back into place the same, so long as you use the same string gauge and tuning.
If you want to change tuning and/or change string gauge, you're changing the tension of the strings, and you'll then have to change the spring tension / claw to compensate.
Again, once you get a certain string/spring tension set, it will pretty much stay like that forever.