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| Telecaster Discussion Forum The world's largest Fender Telecaster Discussion Forum. Please keep discussion limited to Telecaster topics here. |
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#241 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Laurel, Mississippi
Posts: 175
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I gar-on-tee
... the music that influenced your playing (whoever you are), wasn't played on these saddles.
Dead horse, annoyed pig, all that...
__________________
Lane in MS I was born in Soso, Mississippi. Ain't that cool ?? |
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#244 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Nashville Tn.
Posts: 1,217
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Lane in MS
Yeah and your great Granma made her own butter ...Your great Grandad plowed feilds 12 hours a day just to eat and thought that a car was a frivilious luxury too....And don't even ask about a computor....so are you up for that too???? Bill Hullett If fact.....why even play a new fangled electric guitar....your ancestors didn't |
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#247 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Nowhereseville
Posts: 585
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Don't mean to resurrect this thread after such a long time, but I'd been meaning to post a pic of what the Glendale steel set looks like installed, but kept forgetting to. Then I remembered it while taking pics of something else tonight. These are on my MIJ 62 RI. Just for the curious.
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#248 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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Comp saddles
They look good, and maybe offer slightly better intonation, but look how your E string slid right up, and is sitting in the height adjustment hole. Thats the thing I hate about compensated saddles of all types, the strings wander more and sometimes end up in the "plinky zone", where sitars are not far away. That almost never happens with straight saddles, especially slotted varieties. I've tried a few set of comp saddles, and find I just like the straight ones better, I can get em mighty close to perfect.
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#249 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Nowhereseville
Posts: 585
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Re: Comp saddles
Quote:
I'd be willing to bet that before too long we'll see a set of comp'd threaded saddles from somebody. |
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#250 (permalink) | |
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Friend of Leo's
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Re: Comp saddles
Quote:
Are your saddles the ones like Glendale is producing now that are slightly wider so the height screws are farther apart, or are they the earlier versions? Is your skinny E there because it slid there, or is that where you put it intentionally for alignment of the string with the pickup polepiece? Is the height on your outside saddles adjusted for each string with the effect that they are tilted and somewhat follow the neck radius, or are they level with the body and bridge plate surface? My impression, as I had stated earlier in this thread: that tilted height adjustment and not the slanted design is what could cause a tendency for the strings on the outside saddles to slide outward. That tilt is a matter of setup preference that is independent of the slanted design for compensation. |
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#251 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Nowhereseville
Posts: 585
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Re: Comp saddles
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And yeah, those are the earlier Glendales, not the newer, wider ones. |
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#252 (permalink) | |
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Friend of Leo's
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Re: Comp saddles
Quote:
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#253 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 633
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Ahhh. Not this again! This is the thread that persuaded me to try compensated saddles. The timing was great, tho'- another thread had just inspired me to try a Strobostomp and I was horrified to see (and hear) how out of tune I'd been all these years.
As to the 'issue' of strings sliding around on the saddles, I have to agree that it's a function of the vertical tilting that cause them to drift towards the screw holes. If I adjust them to follow the neck radius, this has happened with every 3 saddle bridge I've ever owned. Has nothing to do with compensation. What I'm curious about is why this is such a volatile issue. Unless I've missed it, the players who are opposed to this type of bridge haven't identified any real problems created by this mod. It took less than 5 minutes, was cheap, is totally reversible AND dramatically improves the guitar's performance. Nothing magic about it, and nothing harmful about it either. The emotional backlash and resistance these little guys have generated has really puzzled me. I guess I could better understand it if it was a design concept that I don't agree with- like the 3 bolt neck, for example. |
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#254 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Nowhereseville
Posts: 585
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#255 (permalink) | |||
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Friend of Leo's
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Quote:
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#256 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
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I've been using compensated saddles for 2 years now.The only time I had problems with the strings moving on the saddles was when I was restringing and some serious bending. I took a small triangle file,ran it across the saddle 1 time where I wanted the string to set,never ever had another string to slide. Just enough groove that the string stays put but not to much where you can see it. With brass,in time the string would make its own groove,but I sped up the process. IMHO, the vintage style bridge with 3 brass saddles is all I want on Tele, I may try the aluminum saddle, thats as far as I going....
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#258 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 653
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OK, it's "bttt"ed; now what?
Actually, I'm considering picking up a set of their new cold-rolled steel, nickle plated saddles. Has anyone used their tone caps? |
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