Raz
Well-known member
OK I might be reaching here, and I may be misinformed, but I just checked the Axis specs and it comes with a licensed Floyd...so I ask, why doesn't EBMM guitars come with Original Floyd's...thanks!
Hookpunch said:I have a Floyd on my Sil and never noticed this palm muting modification. I bought it back in '97, can anyone show me a photo of the what they are talking about?
Hookpunch said:Thanks Raz - that is exactly what mine looks like - the only Floyd I have ever had a close look at.
You learn something new every day.
Hookpunch said:The second one - I have the fine tuners on that upswept part of the Floyd. I had no idea it was different than a standard Floyd - the Sil was my first serious electric guitar
hbucker said:I personally don't buy into the lore that the only good Floyds are original Floyds. Where is it written that licensed Floyds have to be manufactured wtih sub standard metal and loose tolerances?
Some are garbage. That's for sure. But some aren't.
hotrodtele said:I have a licensed floyd on my esp f200, the only thing i didn't like was the clamps on the bridge so i ran the strings through the screw holes and eliminated them. it stays in tune for weeks, i'm impressed with it.
Raz said:![]()
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Notice the difference, theres a gap in the second one between the fine tuners and the saddles...that's the Licensed one
Jimi D said:The Floyd licensed trem manufactured by Gotoh for Ernie Ball is a Floyd that's been tweaked out to meet the requirements of Dudley Gimple - EB's main guitar designer - with a couple of enhancements incorporated to meet Eddie Van Halen's needs (including the "looser", "palm-able" trem bar joint). It's actually more comfortable than an original Floyd, imho, and it works just as well. I think it's a pretty nice design over all. I guess is that the bottom line is that the EBMM Floyd is their take on the standard double-locking trem design; like their guitar designs, it's unique...