VStratto Music
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2018
- Messages
- 41
Boys and girls, welcome to chapter #9999 of my PRS (SE) guitar headaches,
In this one, it's been months since I've installed the 2000NOS trem, now shortly after installing the bridge I Tremol-no'd it since I was recording and I appreciated the extra tuning stability since I'm home-studio-struck and hearing something layered a cent of out tune feels like getting slapped in the face (joking).
Well I was done with that and felt like making my playing a bit more artsy, so yesterday I removed the Tremol-no and used the regular claw setup, put some new 11s in, stretched, and they fell out of tune when using the trem, figured maybe it was the nut since the guitar likes 10s so I lubed up the nut, the saddles and the trem pivot screws, put some 10s, streched, and same thing, better, but same thing, especially when I pushed the trem up, all the strings would go sharp, when pushing the trem down, they would go flat, sharp, or stay in tune at random. I tried doing it softly and aggressively and results were pretty random.
So I checked the bridge, it was 1,5mm parallel off the body on both sides, checked the 6 pivot screws, checked the knife edge and the high e was a little bit worn but nothing else, lined them up again with the feeler gauge technique just in case, restringed and retuned again, same thing.
I ended up just reinstalling the Tremol-no, actually the bastard snapped out the guitar shaft while I was tuning up and balancing the guitar trem to float perpendicularly, that was quite a scare.
You know, funny enough, the factory SE trem held the tuning rock steady (after installing the USA nut and locking tuners) even though it had been set up badly and was sitting crooked for 1 year or 2, but I did have to replace it because the screw that held the trem bar went missing and 1 intonation screw got messed up beyond adjustment.
Any extra ideas suggesting what to do? There's no PRS techs around here and I already emailed John Mann.
Also I'm sorry boys but I'm going to unload some frustration talk here, apologies in advance; I'm never buying a PRS again, and not because it doesn't play or sound good, it's the best guitar I've eved had probably, but I'm a young broke guy living in Spain with a DIY mentality that I've developed over the years and this has just been super frustrating, out the factory it was horrible, the bridge was super high, it fell out of tune like crazy, can't use thicker string gauges, but it was my dream guitar so I just kept working and improving it, locking tuners, USA nut, etc, etc,
But a lot of these parts are very expensive if you want the PRS stuff, not to mention it's difficult to get any parts that will fit your guitar because it's so special, and if I want to order quality parts from the US, the bastards in customs charge me 100€ extra for a package that's really small. And I play the hell out of this guitar all the time, and things keep wearing out and breaking and I keep having to replace stuff. And good luck trying to find a tech that even knows what he's doing with a PRS bridge around here.
Man, next time I'm getting a generic superstrat, those just look a lot easier to deal with in terms of repair and DIY, I already have one of those but it's an 8 string, I have to get me a new hardtail 6 string to replace my PRS as main guitar.
Thanks for reading, have a good day!
In this one, it's been months since I've installed the 2000NOS trem, now shortly after installing the bridge I Tremol-no'd it since I was recording and I appreciated the extra tuning stability since I'm home-studio-struck and hearing something layered a cent of out tune feels like getting slapped in the face (joking).
Well I was done with that and felt like making my playing a bit more artsy, so yesterday I removed the Tremol-no and used the regular claw setup, put some new 11s in, stretched, and they fell out of tune when using the trem, figured maybe it was the nut since the guitar likes 10s so I lubed up the nut, the saddles and the trem pivot screws, put some 10s, streched, and same thing, better, but same thing, especially when I pushed the trem up, all the strings would go sharp, when pushing the trem down, they would go flat, sharp, or stay in tune at random. I tried doing it softly and aggressively and results were pretty random.
So I checked the bridge, it was 1,5mm parallel off the body on both sides, checked the 6 pivot screws, checked the knife edge and the high e was a little bit worn but nothing else, lined them up again with the feeler gauge technique just in case, restringed and retuned again, same thing.
I ended up just reinstalling the Tremol-no, actually the bastard snapped out the guitar shaft while I was tuning up and balancing the guitar trem to float perpendicularly, that was quite a scare.
You know, funny enough, the factory SE trem held the tuning rock steady (after installing the USA nut and locking tuners) even though it had been set up badly and was sitting crooked for 1 year or 2, but I did have to replace it because the screw that held the trem bar went missing and 1 intonation screw got messed up beyond adjustment.
Any extra ideas suggesting what to do? There's no PRS techs around here and I already emailed John Mann.
Also I'm sorry boys but I'm going to unload some frustration talk here, apologies in advance; I'm never buying a PRS again, and not because it doesn't play or sound good, it's the best guitar I've eved had probably, but I'm a young broke guy living in Spain with a DIY mentality that I've developed over the years and this has just been super frustrating, out the factory it was horrible, the bridge was super high, it fell out of tune like crazy, can't use thicker string gauges, but it was my dream guitar so I just kept working and improving it, locking tuners, USA nut, etc, etc,
But a lot of these parts are very expensive if you want the PRS stuff, not to mention it's difficult to get any parts that will fit your guitar because it's so special, and if I want to order quality parts from the US, the bastards in customs charge me 100€ extra for a package that's really small. And I play the hell out of this guitar all the time, and things keep wearing out and breaking and I keep having to replace stuff. And good luck trying to find a tech that even knows what he's doing with a PRS bridge around here.
Man, next time I'm getting a generic superstrat, those just look a lot easier to deal with in terms of repair and DIY, I already have one of those but it's an 8 string, I have to get me a new hardtail 6 string to replace my PRS as main guitar.
Thanks for reading, have a good day!