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susiwong wrote:
hibidy wrote:It is indeed an "original" floyd rose. Hmmmmmm, like I said I'm kinda giving up but I'm DRAWN to that guitar (in many colors ;) ) for some reason.
Original means "made for Floyd Rose by Schaller" here, as opposed to the many licensed versions, promising top grade material (steel etc).
There is some truth behind this.
The original Floyd, the Schaller and the upmarket Ibanez trems sure are built better than most of the rest.
Ymmv,
susiwong
I could be wrong but it's always been my understanding that the original FR were the ones that the two studs were not inserts with machined screws but wood screws with the bevel for the rose as seen here

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here is the whammy that goes with it, no doubt well aged :hihi:

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The body in the picture was the one that was going to be 'scarface', note not recessed and this is not the whammy that was on it. This is the rose that was on my Kramer Ritchie Sambora from the mid 80s. However the rose that was on that body (an ESP body from the early 80s) was identical except black.

My first locking whammy was a kahler I put in my 72 tele custom in 85 0r 86 which was also when the washburn wonder bar came out. I can remember lots of debates on the three, I never recall a complaint about the rose not being able to be pulled up, but I do remember many people complaining that the rose was to 'light of a touch'. I always assumed that this was because with both my guitars from that era I did have have the springs very loose and the back of the bridge was quite high (the Karmer was not shimmed in the neck pocket and niether was the ESP until I got it and I did shim it) It looked quite odd and I remember looking through mags to see if the back end of the rose should be that high and I noted that the one EVH used was exactly that way. On the old ESP body guitar (with my first Warmoth neck) I had to use .010s (I prefer .009s) to give enough string tension to pull the back of the tremolo up but it still broke strings.

I remember that one of the selling points of the wonder bar and kahler was that when you rested your palm on the rose for palm muting you threw the guitar out of tune but not with the others. When the ESP had it's original floyd rose (which I still have as well) I had to keep a stock of high 'E' strings on hand because I would break them. When I had the kahler I had the same issue and switched to 'Stay in Tune' strings that had rubber reinforcements on the base of the strings.

I always thought the recessed rose systems were to make it more comfortable to play but now you have me thinking that perhaps I just didn't know it was suppose to only dive and naturally found a way to make it pull up (though that doesn't explain the Kramer). Two semi-tones seems about right as far as how high I could pull back. The kahler really sucked because the bars were thin and it was hard to tune (much worse than a rose)...twice I broke the bar itself.

We use to practice at an American Legion Hall, we had a full stage (with homemade risers and levels all over the place) and a full bar at our disposal (which meant why go out when we could have parties there). The first bar I broke on the kahler was while we were practicing and I hurled the bar the length of the room and it stuck in the wall. The second one I broke was while I was alone on the stage during a break at a practice just fooling around. When the bar broke my drummer was standing in front of the stage and dove on the floor...I laughed so hard.

BTW, if you're wondering about the hole I left in the wall, well that wasn't half as bad as when our power amp rack on casters sunk right through the old wooden floor (it had a CS1200, 2 cs 800s and a cs 400 in it). :hihi:
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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note, I did not get the Kramer until 1995...just wanted to point that out ;)
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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susiwong wrote:sssh ... don't tell anybody, coming from hibidy it has to be an illegal copy by Ibanez ! :P
My Ibanez Les Paul knock-off has always been one of my favorite guitars. Instead of a solid carved top, it has a bent top with a small hollow space between the top and the back, which I've always imagined gives it its particularly warm sound. The funny thing is I now have it loaded with genuine '61 patent-applied-for-sticker PAF's which are worth several multiples more than the guitar itself. ;)

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nix808 wrote:omg!
I have this one on the way:
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That's amazing! What model is it? How are the pickups mounted?

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nix808 wrote:Here is the other I look at->
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What model is it?

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AutoStatic wrote:Hello NEF, I know some bit about Teisco's as I own a K-4L and a Checkmate 15 amplifier. In the past I also owned a Checkmate 17 amp, a Teisco SG style bass and an ET-210. Basically there are only very few collectible Teisco's: the Spectrum 5, the May Queen and to a lesser extent the K-4L.
Teisco Audition is a very generic designation, do you happen to know what type of Teisco you own exactly? Could you post some pics otherwise?

Best,

Jeremy
I will post some pics up soon as its ready to get picked up. I have the shop guy doing the bit on.

I want to say this is it rite here
http://cgi.ebay.com/Teisco-Vintage-Elec ... _500wt_922

If mine is not that one its VERY close same Dual Gold Foil Pick up sunburst body, Whammy all that.
http://www.reverbnation.com/neverenoughfun
check me out fan me if you like it and ill do the same.

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@ Hink,
- you're probably correct that the woodscrews were first, but I definiely remember the Original Floyd being in a different league than the licensed ones due to materials. Ibanez followed soon, and of course Schaller even improved on the original design they manufactured for Floyd.
- if you angle the neck back by shimming or by factory-shaping the neck joint accordingly you have to raise the back of the trem a bit so the strings don't rest on the highest fret, pure geometry. :shrug:
This gives you a bit of clearance under the trem, good for ca 2 semitones up.
Same is also true for all Strat or PRS trems, really.
Ymmv,
susiwong

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Thanks to my bacon/egg sandwich crisis I was not able to go and check those guitars.

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susiwong wrote:@ Hink,
- you're probably correct that the woodscrews were first, but I definiely remember the Original Floyd being in a different league than the licensed ones due to materials. Ibanez followed soon, and of course Schaller even improved on the original design they manufactured for Floyd.
- if you angle the neck back by shimming or by factory-shaping the neck joint accordingly you have to raise the back of the trem a bit so the strings don't rest on the highest fret, pure geometry. :shrug:
This gives you a bit of clearance under the trem, good for ca 2 semitones up.
Same is also true for all Strat or PRS trems, really.
Ymmv,
susiwong
I just responded and something went wrong...basically I do not remember if I shimmed the neck to angle it or just raise it so I had room to raise the bridge. That guitar has not been together since 1992 and was the victim of extreme frustration of my trying to learn how to play again without doing coke (that's where the crack in the ESP body came from I guess but I haven't touched coke since) I have never owned a non locking tremolo...I do know the wood screw bridges are not interchangable with the machine screw ones and (the machinist in me speaking) the machine screw ones are a much better design :tu:

Both of my wood screw whammys are between 25 and 30 years old, I have two licesned ones not doing anything and three more FR systems currently in guitars so in total I have at least 7 different FR systems. I have so many parts scattered about in boxes, one day I'm going to get them all organized...I'm close now but have two large containers to go through still since moving last summer.

BTW what happened to the Washburn Wonderbar? :)
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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Hello NEF, I've checked here: http://www.mark-cole.co.uk/teisco/
No close match for the guitar shown in the eBay auction. I wonder if it really is a Teisco, maybe it's 'just' a Kawai, so produced in the same factory but issued under a different brand name.
And I forgot one very valuable Teisco model, the TB-64, a baritone with the so-called monkey-grip body: http://www.mainstreetvintageco.com/cata ... 568608.htm
I'd love to get my hands on that one...

Best,

Jeremy

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hibidy wrote:Thanks to my bacon/egg sandwich crisis I was not able to go and check those guitars.
that stinks
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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Hink wrote:
hibidy wrote:Thanks to my bacon/egg sandwich crisis I was not able to go and check those guitars.
that stinks
You don't know the half of it :hihi:

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I love that ET-210, AutoStatic.

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Hink wrote:... that's where the crack in the ESP body came from I guess but I haven't touched coke since
:-o :-o :-o
It's the politics of contraband,
It's the smuggler's blues ...

Better get back to guitars ... :scared:
Hink wrote:what happened to the Washburn Wonderbar? :)
Don't really know, maybe living in Heavy Metal museums around the world ?
They weighed a ton, and Washburn didn't make more than 3 afaik. :shrug:

Lol,
susiwong

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Interesting pics of these Teiscos ! :tu:
Especially that baritone looks nice ...
Cheers,
susiwong

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