I don’t carry a wallet either....Not allowed...Lmaoooo...
Happy Wife....Happy Life....![]()
I will be happy to relieve you of said dollars and the pain in your arse---er hipThose dollars were making my wallet too thick, anyway....which was causing a pain in my hip while driving.
I will be happy to relieve you of said dollars and the pain in your arse---er hip![]()
Two very good video reviews on the current String Butler. I'm actually surprised by the results:
Which means that you need to order 5 String Butlers...I got three Les Paul's and a Doubleneck and have no tuning issues.
The Moderne has an odd delayed tuning response because of the pulleys. When you adjust one of the middle strings it's a second or so before the pitch settles. On a meter you can actually watch the needle keep moving after you turn the button. Kind of freaky. Tuning my Moderne used to drive our stage tech nuts - a short trip for him.
Two very good video reviews on the current String Butler. I'm actually surprised by the results:
Looking at the vids, it seems the String Butler is intended as a fix for people whose G string goes flat. That isn't a problem I've ever had on Gibsons. I originally thought the SB should help with sharp problems too, but there's nothing in the vids to show that.
I kept wishing they'd do some big bends on the low E & A and then check the tuning on the G string; that would've been proof for me that it was doing its job. Or work the Bigsby a bit like Smitty suggested and then check that G.
I still believe most tuning problems on Gibson/Epi types are typicall due to poorly cut nuts. Perhaps I could be convinced, but first I'd need to have a guitar that doesn't hold its tune well to test the Butler on. My only problem guitars are Strats, and most of mine have no real trouble either.
Looking at the vids, it seems the String Butler is intended as a fix for people whose G string goes flat. That isn't a problem I've ever had on Gibsons. I originally thought the SB should help with sharp problems too, but there's nothing in the vids to show that.
I kept wishing they'd do some big bends on the low E & A and then check the tuning on the G string; that would've been proof for me that it was doing its job. Or work the Bigsby a bit like Smitty suggested and then check that G.
I still believe most tuning problems on Gibson/Epi types are typicall due to poorly cut nuts. Perhaps I could be convinced, but first I'd need to have a guitar that doesn't hold its tune well to test the Butler on. My only problem guitars are Strats, and most of mine have no real trouble either.
Most of my G string issues were nearly eliminated by switching to a wound G string. I say ”nearly” because it now acts like the other strings, with no unique oddities of its own.
I even use a wound G on my Jackson with a Floyd Rose. A wound G also removed a lot of the spikiness on my Strat, as well as performing better with the vibrato.
I have gone to the wound G string .017 also. I do not bend that much so it is not an issue for me.