Good evening gentlemen, I was directed to this forum in particular for answers to this question.
Here is a little background on the project... A couple years back I bought a used Jackson RR3 and have since done plenty of modifications to it, mostly electrical. Now as it is, I have the tone knobs desoldered from the circuit and simply separate 500k volume pots wired directly to the switch then output, basically the hottest setup that I can get, and I do this with all of my guitars these days. This guitar in particular sounds a bit darker than my other guitars and has a bit of a slower attack... a bit sludgy.
This is my only locking bridge guitar, but I have some hard tails and some floating bridges. This is really the only one that exhibits this issue. I think that it may be due to the poor quality of the stock licensed locking bridge because even when the guitar is unplugged it still exhibits this quality. The idea being that my understanding of the cheaper bridges is that they are made of lower quality less resonant metals, and that this loss of vibrational energy at the bridge could be leading to what I am experiencing and not a pickup or electronics issue. Is there anyone here that has first hand experience replacing a cheap locking bridge with a real floyd that would be able to verify whether I am on the right path or not?
Here is a little background on the project... A couple years back I bought a used Jackson RR3 and have since done plenty of modifications to it, mostly electrical. Now as it is, I have the tone knobs desoldered from the circuit and simply separate 500k volume pots wired directly to the switch then output, basically the hottest setup that I can get, and I do this with all of my guitars these days. This guitar in particular sounds a bit darker than my other guitars and has a bit of a slower attack... a bit sludgy.
This is my only locking bridge guitar, but I have some hard tails and some floating bridges. This is really the only one that exhibits this issue. I think that it may be due to the poor quality of the stock licensed locking bridge because even when the guitar is unplugged it still exhibits this quality. The idea being that my understanding of the cheaper bridges is that they are made of lower quality less resonant metals, and that this loss of vibrational energy at the bridge could be leading to what I am experiencing and not a pickup or electronics issue. Is there anyone here that has first hand experience replacing a cheap locking bridge with a real floyd that would be able to verify whether I am on the right path or not?
Comment