It's becoming a problem because when I do a double string bend, the other string dips tuning. Is there any non-invasive (no drilling) way to block the Floyd Rose in my SL2H that is easily reversible and keeps tuning and intonation the same?
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Temporarily Block my OFR
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you can try this.....
measure the distance between your floyd block and the "wall" of the guitar in the trem cavities. Then find a chunk of metal to stuff in there. I did this once and it worked great. the one thing you can do is rub a little Locktite on the side of the metal so it sticks to the Floyd block a bit. that way your sure it dont move but it will come off easily.
there may better methods out there, but this is the only one I can think of doing. I am certianly not well versed in blocking floyds, I use my floyds."clean sounds are for pussies" - Axewielder
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One thing that a lot of players don't think of is that when you do a unison type bend, you can stabilize the trem by applying downward pressure with your picking hand. It takes a bit of practice, but once you master it you can bend away on a fully floating OFR guitar as if it were a hardtail. I do this all the time. That being said, blocking the trem has advantages too, like being able to do drop tunings on the fly. It's all good._________________________________________________
"Artists should be free to spend their days mastering their craft so that working people can toil away in a more beautiful world."
- Ken M
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+2 just put one on my soloist best ~$50 ever spent. Now I can use one floyded guitar for a whole show to include drop d tuning between songs. You can even set it to divebomb only mode. I'm hoping to find someplace I can buy them in bulk
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Recently, while installing a drop d tuna on one of my dinkys, I was putting a trem blocker on the string side of the body in the trem cavity. I added a fourth spring to my trem setup, with two being on either side and the center spring removed to make room for the the trem blocker. What I discovered was that the addition of the extra spring almost completely took away the tune dipping of other strings while bending. I was kind of surprised by this, but was a nice surprise.
It worked so well, I added another spring to my other dinky that does not have a drop d tuna or trem blocker. Seems to work well. It doesn't completely remove the dipping, but it's pretty close."Some days you're the dog, other days you're the hydrant." - on the back of the business card for Bella the Pomeranian
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