
CrowsofFritz
Flamingo!
Ohhhhh it was a sim?
For some reason, it sounds worse now.

Just kidding WS.
For some reason, it sounds worse now.

Just kidding WS.

Figures it was a sim.![]()
I'll have to do a few calculations based upon the string tensions that 18:1 gear ratio tuners are subjected to.at guitar tensions not a chance in hell.
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I'll have to use sims for a little while unless I can find a way to mic my tiny Pignose battery jobbie to give me something good - any ideas tonefreaks?
I'll have to use sims for a little while unless I can find a way to mic my tiny Pignose battery jobbie to give me something good - any ideas tonefreaks?
Now I've not used a Pignose (Iread that Zappa used one in the studio), one of my secret weapons is a 2 watt amp into an 8" speaker. Stick a mic in front of that thing and hit record.![]()
I hope you're not disappointed in me--but it's an amp sim.
To say that all tuners stay in place is patently false.
With enough string tension (broken tooth aside) worm gears that aren't precison machined to close tolerances can be back driven....and slip.
Precision made tuners are worth every dollar you pay for.
I've equipped a few of my guitars with Schaeller (sp?) 18:1 ratio tuners made in Germany.
It's like anything else.....you get what you pay for.
Plain rubbish. Pinion worm gear mechanisms do not slip under the loads they are applied to support. Industries from shipbuilding to heavy steel furnaces depend on them. So do guitar tuners.
there's no 'tending to agree' on this. Worm gears can't slip at their intended tensions.I tend to agree with this (which is why I said my Grovers don't slip...none of my tuners do but I needed some more words to build my case against those crappy assed '82 Strat tuners which were pure shit). If there is slippage it is probably string slippage around the winding on the peg, or around the ball end windings if you dive heavily on a trem.
there's no 'tending to agree' on this. Worm gears can't slip at their intended tensions.
lol .....I tend to agree with this ^^^.
most people mistake tuners slipping with what is going on at the nut and the saddle. If the string moves freely over them there will be no problem. I've had two in this week already that the owners were convinced were bad tuners. One even had them swapped out in store only to find he still had the same problem.
I used to, and I would put a drop of solder at the string end windings (ball end) and it seemed to keep them in tune.
And like I said earlier, the winding around the string ball if you are hitting a trem really hard. I used to, and I would put a drop of solder at the string end windings (ball end) and it seemed to keep them in tune. Of course, on serious trems, the nut end was usually locking so not an issue, and Kahlers were no exception.