Yggdrasil wrote: ↑26 Jun 2022, 22:22
Husek wrote: ↑22 Jun 2022, 21:53
Fender's two-point Trems are very very reliable, moreover, if you combine them with locking tuners and some graphite on the nut you are golden, if memory serves me well, that's what Ben uses on his strat as well.
Thanks for the tip! So that's not a Floyd Rose? The last guitar I had with a whammy was a Floyd Rose Schecter Demon with locking tuners, but that went out of tune just by my looking at it...
Not a floyd rose at all, it's a standard two-point trem, found on all American fenders from mid 00s.
Now, if you really really like floyd roses (they do have a different feel when compared to fender's trem system), it is possible to keep it in tune, but it takes a lot of time and money to do so, here's the tl;dr to keep a floyd rose in tune:
1) Get rid of your OEM floyd rose, and buy a brand new one, I have nothing but bad experiences with OEM floyd roses
2) When you do get a new one, make sure to pick the `original` series, the special series and other budget-friendly options they all look similar, but you can really see why they are 60% cheaper.
3) As I said, locking tuners is a must
4) Locking nut set from Floyd Rose, those aren't expensive, and yet I find a lot of guitars being sold with floyd roses don't even have locking nut, or they just put generic ones, and those are big to keep the tuning.
5) once you have all that set, make sure you have intonation and action correct, high action usually makes it easier to go out of tune
6) get yourself a new set of strings, play with it, do some dive bombs, you know the whole Mr whammy shenanigans, for a good week, playing at least a couple of hours a day, so the strings can find their sweet spot.
From there you will be gtg.
side notes:
Tems are finicky and even the best trem system in the world will cause some detuning, 12 string guitars are also notoriously finick and can easily go out of tune, and that's way it's easier finding an unicorn in the field than a 12-stringer with a trem