• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

allenk732

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 17, 2015
Messages
51
Location
Edwardsville, IL
So I'm working on selling/ trading my Axis to get a JP model. I just love the neck on the JP too much and can't stand not having one...

My question is, how difficult is it to change tunings with that floating trem? I play alot of E standard stuff but also so D standard and dropped C. What needs to be adjusted to do this without throwing the trem all out of whack?
 

YandasMusic

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 19, 2014
Messages
82
Location
Nebraska
Whenever you change your tuning or string gauge, the tension on the floating bridge is going to change causing it to tilt one way or the other. To counter this, you need adjust the springs that counter balance bridge found in the back of the guitar. If drop your tuning, you will need to loosen those springs. If you raise your tuning, you will need to tighten them.

It isn't really hard to make the necessary adjustments, but it is time consuming and involves a little trial and error. Doing this Every once in awhile isn't a big deal but will be very irritating if you are constantly changing turnings back and forth. You can forget about trying to change tunnings in the middle of a live show, it just isn't going to happen.

If you don't really use the floating trem, you can probably get a "tremol-no" or some sort tremolo blocking system. This makes it so you can't pull up on the trem, only dive with it. This would allow you to switch up your tunings much easier.
 

orion_21

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 10, 2011
Messages
112
Location
Greenville, sc
Stupid question maybe, but anyone try the digitech Drop or the pitch fork? I heard the lag is still a bit too much to really be usefull...
 

Firesource

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 21, 2014
Messages
181
Location
Denmark
You can just use a few pieces of wood to block the trem, and then it will be as solid as a hard tail!
 

acwild

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 27, 2006
Messages
855
Location
Hillsborough, NJ
Get the pin version Tremol-No. I use drop D tunings on my JP without issues with this device. The Pitch Fork won't sound as good. At least it doesn't for me.
 

DarthV

Active member
Joined
Aug 13, 2014
Messages
41
Get the pin version Tremol-No. I use drop D tunings on my JP without issues with this device. The Pitch Fork won't sound as good. At least it doesn't for me.

Not sure how well the tremol-no can handle going from E to drop C, that's a pretty decent change in overall string tension. Not to mention, those strings are going to feel pretty strange at one tuning or another. Guess there may be a custom string set that could work for the OP.
 

Hiza22

Member
Joined
Jul 5, 2015
Messages
23
Stupid question maybe, but anyone try the digitech Drop or the pitch fork? I heard the lag is still a bit too much to really be usefull...

I have a Whammy DT (the right-hand side of this pedal is the droptune you're talking about) and two guitars:

- a JP6 in drop D
- a JP7 in standard tuning

I'm using the DT on a regular basis to drop by 1/2 or 1 step. For this, I didn't notice any lag whatsoever while playing things like Symphony X, Versailles or Dream Theater. The tone is preserved enough that I don't hear any alteration, and the pedal works for single notes as well as full chords (that last point is important... I tested other devices like the Morpheus or the droptune function of a Pod HD, both did a very bad job with full chords).

I played with lower settings, but don't have any serious, long term experience with them. It sounded fine, but a little on the artificial side when I went lower than 2 steps.

As for the first question in this thread, I had to make that kind of settings recently (on the JP7 because I just bought it second-hand, on the JP6 in order to get it to drop D) and it was my first time. It was surprisingly easy, it just requires some patience because you're playing with several settings that more or less depend on each other, so it's trial and errors as another poster said. Those settings are:

1) Two screws inside the back of the guitars. Alternate between tuning the guitar and acting on those screws until the bridge is parallel to the body AND the guitar is in tune.

2) The truss rod. If you're making large changes, or if your guitar isn't properly setup, you may end up with too low or too high action. If that happens, loosen the strings a bit, give a 1/4 of a turn on the truss rod and let the guitar rest for the night. Be delicate with that, never overdo it.

3) When the bridge is horizontal and the truss rod to your liking, check the intonation with the screws at the bottom of the bridge. This is a small setting that doesn't affect the previous two.

All in all, with the JP6, going in drop D took me less that 15 minutes and I didn't even change the string gauge. On the JP7, where I had to go over everything and the previous owner seemingly used *very* light string gauge (the bridge was at 30° when I installed 10-56 strings), I took me two hours, plus the time for the truss rod to settle.
 
Last edited:
Top Bottom