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Charles

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Nov 25, 2007
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130
Hey guys,

In a month or two, I will be moving to boarding school. Unfortunately, because of space issues, I can only take one guitar, so I've decided on my JP BFR.

When I play covers, I usually take everything down a whole step because I have a low voice, but some songs I play in standard. Now, when I'm playing live, I usually have two guitars to accommodate this, but at boarding school I will be gigging with only one. My JP goes crazy if I try to change tunings and everything goes out of tune.

I WOULD convert my JP to a hardtail, but I'm too big of a trem user to even start considering that.

What practical advice would you guys give me in turning my JP into a guitar that'll be able to change tunings on the fly without any problems?

Thanks,
Charles
 

guertzi

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May 24, 2007
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396
Location
Dusseldorf, Germany
Hey guys,

In a month or two, I will be moving to boarding school. Unfortunately, because of space issues, I can only take one guitar, so I've decided on my JP BFR.

That implies you have other guitars than the JP.
Question: do you have any hard tails among them?

What practical advice would you guys give me in turning my JP into a guitar that'll be able to change tunings on the fly without any problems?

There's a price for everything, nothing's for free EVER!
In your case that means, if you want the benefits of a floating vibrato, you will ALWAYS have trouble when changing to a different tuning.
Maybe it would help to install something like a Hipshot tremsetter or the likes, but this will also change the feel of your vibrato.

The only alternatives I can think of at the moment would be to either give your first decision a second thought and go for another guitar of your collection (preferably a hard tail) OR:
convert your JP BFR into an "almost-hard-tail" by putting a wood block between the vibrato block and the body, just like Fender does in the Clapton Signature model. The BIG advantage: you can take your beloved JP with you to boarding school.
Of course you would have to refrain from your usual dive bombs and stuff ;) but as I stated before: there's a price for everything...

Hope that helps!
 

Charles

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Nov 25, 2007
Messages
130
My only hardtail guitar is an Ibanez Hollowbody, but it's not nearly as versatile as my BFR, and that's definitely what I want to use.
 

guertzi

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May 24, 2007
Messages
396
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Dusseldorf, Germany
The Tremol-No should do the trick, that is exactly one of the tools I was referring to.

Converts your JP into a hard tail (so to speak).
 
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Spudmurphy

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Aug 23, 2005
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12,037
Location
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Do as I do - when I go away on business I sometimes take a real cheap guitar with me - and I mean cheap - $50. Get yourself one and have fun setting it up.

I kinda had a shock too when you said you were taking your BFR to boarding school!!

Get 2 cheap ones and leave that baby at home !!!
 

candid_x

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Jun 26, 2006
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3,272
Lefty, which one works in the Luke and how difficult was installation? Any down sides to it?
 

Charles

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Nov 25, 2007
Messages
130
The JP is my best option by far, it's versatile enough to play pretty much anything, which is what I need in a scenario where I'll be playing tons of different music and only have room for one guitar. The piezo is absolute money when I need to play acoustic stuff.

Call me a moron..but is the middle position some kind of single coil thing? It sounds very single coily.
 

BigMESA

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Jul 5, 2008
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I had a Tremol-No on a floyd once and loved it. Kept it in Dive bomb mode all the time and it never failed me live.
 

whitestrat

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Aug 13, 2007
Messages
2,589
Location
The Little Red Dot
What practical advice would you guys give me in turning my JP into a guitar that'll be able to change tunings on the fly without any problems?

Boarding school... Ah... that brings back memories. That was 15 years back for me. Hahahaha...

Anyways, a tremsetter should help.

But if I were you, I'd take the Luke... That HSS combo would be more versatile than the JP6... and the vintage trem can be locked with little hassle.
 
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