Ok,
On my Yellow Strat, I want to go with a Fender tuner. I have noticed that Fender likes the '2 pin' tuners, which just require accurate alignment before drilling the two, small pilot holes. I want something with a vintage look and probably in gold with a pearloid knob. This will keep my theme of all different kinds of hardware finishes because the Strat was built from a hodgepodge of parts. I even have gold Dunlop straplock posts and a few gold screws on the guitar.
Let me preface this with a word about locking tuners. I do not consider them.
A locking tuner makes string changes faster because you can capture the string easily, but a locking tuner still has fore-aft movement in the post and most locking tuners I have seen have MORE MOVEMENT in the post that a regular tuner. I have never seen a locking tuner add ANY tuning stability when compared to a reputable, quality standard tuner and properly wound strings. If a locking tuner gives you better tuning, it's most likely because the strings were not wound correctly.
I use the half hitch method Wayne Charvel showed me back in the 1980's when I would bother him at his shop. Still works.
I have been looking at a set of the Fender Deluxe Strat Tele "F" TUNERS Stratocaster Gold & Pearl #0990846200, which differ from the true 'vintage' 11/32" post and press-in ferrules, in that they use the more stable and secure threaded ferrule.

Anybody have any comments on these particular tuners from actual use???
On my Yellow Strat, I want to go with a Fender tuner. I have noticed that Fender likes the '2 pin' tuners, which just require accurate alignment before drilling the two, small pilot holes. I want something with a vintage look and probably in gold with a pearloid knob. This will keep my theme of all different kinds of hardware finishes because the Strat was built from a hodgepodge of parts. I even have gold Dunlop straplock posts and a few gold screws on the guitar.
Let me preface this with a word about locking tuners. I do not consider them.
A locking tuner makes string changes faster because you can capture the string easily, but a locking tuner still has fore-aft movement in the post and most locking tuners I have seen have MORE MOVEMENT in the post that a regular tuner. I have never seen a locking tuner add ANY tuning stability when compared to a reputable, quality standard tuner and properly wound strings. If a locking tuner gives you better tuning, it's most likely because the strings were not wound correctly.
I use the half hitch method Wayne Charvel showed me back in the 1980's when I would bother him at his shop. Still works.
I have been looking at a set of the Fender Deluxe Strat Tele "F" TUNERS Stratocaster Gold & Pearl #0990846200, which differ from the true 'vintage' 11/32" post and press-in ferrules, in that they use the more stable and secure threaded ferrule.

Anybody have any comments on these particular tuners from actual use???
