Tuning
- woefuly misspelt
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sun Dec 05, 2010 11:42 am
Tuning
An idea. Perhaps I can be pointed towards albums where this has been done?
A 6-string electric guitar. The top 2 strings tuned to D and the remaining strings tuned to E. With Bottom E strings for all 6 strings. So, if the first 4 strings on one fret are held and all 6 strings played the result would be three 2-string power chords (I think).
Perhaps this is a set-up and tuning for someone who is not a guitarist.
Some careful filing at the nut would be required. The Bridge too?
Are there any dangers with this?
A 6-string electric guitar. The top 2 strings tuned to D and the remaining strings tuned to E. With Bottom E strings for all 6 strings. So, if the first 4 strings on one fret are held and all 6 strings played the result would be three 2-string power chords (I think).
Perhaps this is a set-up and tuning for someone who is not a guitarist.
Some careful filing at the nut would be required. The Bridge too?
Are there any dangers with this?
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- Guitar Legend
- Posts: 249
- Joined: Tue Nov 30, 2010 4:25 pm
woefuly misspelt wrote:An idea. Perhaps I can be pointed towards albums where this has been done?
A 6-string electric guitar. The top 2 strings tuned to D and the remaining strings tuned to E. With Bottom E strings for all 6 strings. So, if the first 4 strings on one fret are held and all 6 strings played the result would be three 2-string power chords (I think).
Perhaps this is a set-up and tuning for someone who is not a guitarist.
Some careful filing at the nut would be required. The Bridge too?
Are there any dangers with this?
There would be no dangers per se, and you'd probably have to do some work on the nut and the bridge, and make sure that all the strings were intonated, and that the truss rods had ample reinforcement.
Nothing wrong with trying.
I was away when this went on, are you being serious?woefuly misspelt wrote:An idea. Perhaps I can be pointed towards albums where this has been done?
A 6-string electric guitar. The top 2 strings tuned to D and the remaining strings tuned to E. With Bottom E strings for all 6 strings. So, if the first 4 strings on one fret are held and all 6 strings played the result would be three 2-string power chords (I think).
Perhaps this is a set-up and tuning for someone who is not a guitarist.
Some careful filing at the nut would be required. The Bridge too?
Are there any dangers with this?
No you can't be, can you?
As Mikey says, you'll never learn to play, And of course it'll f*** up your guitar, the strain on the neck would be to much, you would never get the intonation correct, and finally, once you've filed your top nut and bridge saddles you should consider your guitar knackered.
the sensible thing to do is just string it up correctly and learn to play.

I didn't get where I am today,
by being somewhere else.
by being somewhere else.
Talking of guitar tuning and I hope its not off thread, I'm tuning and setting up guitars fairly often and have taken up using the 'Frequency-counter / instrument-tuner' off the website http://www.techmind.org/audio/. The free download is called "tuner12.exe".
When the guitar is plugged in to the microphone port on the computer you have a direct read out of the musical note frequency, and the name of the note and the percentage plus or minus error. This is ideal for simple tuning and also gives best setting position string length for the bridge adjusting yokes.
When the guitar is plugged in to the microphone port on the computer you have a direct read out of the musical note frequency, and the name of the note and the percentage plus or minus error. This is ideal for simple tuning and also gives best setting position string length for the bridge adjusting yokes.
another excellent tuner
http://www.aptuner.com/cgi-bin/aptuner/apmain.html
http://www.aptuner.com/cgi-bin/aptuner/apmain.html
we've been here before.........i use ffloyds on two of my gits ...i dont use a trem...so they're both
locked with blocks to stop any rocking...once tuned the only thing that affects them is temperature
but with the fine tuners( so the machine heads are not disturbed ) and a good tuner ( esp boss tu 2/3 )re tune is fast accurate and rock solid
anybody who's git balances on springs ( trem arm) ...thinks it will return to perfect tuning esp after dive bombing a few dozen times is in cloud cuckoo land...if you dont use a trem get rid of the springs...if you do a ffloyds
the best option if set up right
locked with blocks to stop any rocking...once tuned the only thing that affects them is temperature
but with the fine tuners( so the machine heads are not disturbed ) and a good tuner ( esp boss tu 2/3 )re tune is fast accurate and rock solid
anybody who's git balances on springs ( trem arm) ...thinks it will return to perfect tuning esp after dive bombing a few dozen times is in cloud cuckoo land...if you dont use a trem get rid of the springs...if you do a ffloyds
the best option if set up right
you need to modify your floyd with the new type loading screws...olly can advise you..as he did his
perhaps olly will reply when he reads this ♪♪
have a look
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/6-x-fast-loaders- ... _500wt_843
perhaps olly will reply when he reads this ♪♪
have a look
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/6-x-fast-loaders- ... _500wt_843
Last edited by polyal on Wed Mar 23, 2011 7:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I have had 10s on my low pro trem with no problemsjamesd74 wrote:Has any body tried to put 10s on a Floyd, I tried last night and they won't lock in the trem.
I completely forgot about these. I did buy them and I have them in my desk drawer at work!polyal wrote:you need to modify your floyd with the new type loading screws...olly can advise you..as he did his
perhaps olly will reply when he reads this ♪♪
The reason that I didn't rush to put them on is that the tubes the strings sit in seem rather long - like around 1 inch from memory, and I think that will look a bit odd on my guitar. I don't know why they make them so long?
But these would defo solve your issue James