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sanderhermans

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Nov 5, 2013
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belgium
What is a good way to mute the springs of your tremolo? I find that both in my al and my luke the springs tend to ring out for a significant period of time. Especially noticeable when doing fast palm muting and stuff like that. Both trems are set up floating (luke style)
The thing is that i used to be all about stop tails untill i tried my first ebmm trem guitar. And now i love to have a trem. The musicman trems are just so stable and they seem to make the guitar even more resonant. Only down side to me is the ringing the springs do...
 

BrickGlass

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Jan 23, 2009
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Utah
Noiseless springs from fu-tone.com. The fu stands for Floyd Upgrades and not the other fu, haha. They are amazing and work perfectly. I hate the problem you describe and have had it on a couple of guitars. Not anymore. Be aware you may need to file off the coating where the spring contacts the bridge block and the screw claw though. I had all kinds of weird grounding problems before I learned that trick. Multiple guitars were humming really loud and it was because the coating on the springs messes up the ground somehow. Easy to fix in about 30 seconds with a file. Great investment and it will solve your problem without stuffing cotton or foam inside the springs, which is another option.
 

xjbebop

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Jan 8, 2013
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AZ High Country
I've used a piece of soft foam stuffed under them. works great, doesn't effect anything else and costs nothing...
 

sanderhermans

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belgium
I know about the foam tricks and have used this myself in the past but i wouldnt want annything to get stuck in between the springs and affect tuning stability.... i dont know if it will but for the few bucks this costs, ill go with the safest option....
 

Tollywood

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Mar 23, 2011
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Rhode Island
I love those springs...I put them on my ebmm trems as well as my floyd roses. Here is what they look like:

al-rear-23885.jpg
 

dt89

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This is the cheapest and most efficient way I've seen. I muted all 5 of my EBMM guitars for only a couple bucks.

 

MJM

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Feb 18, 2008
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Chicago, IL
I've done it to all of my guitars as well.. a little cotton inside the spring. To be honest, I'm completely shocked that there isn't an engineering solution that guitar builders haven't incorporated into the design.. Yes, clearly I know playing style varies greatly between players, but.. it certainly has been an issue for me forever.. Anyway, like others have said, lots of ways to quiet them..
 

Etudica

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Sep 5, 2012
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PA
I've used many things in the past from foam to cotton balls to heat shrink tubes, but lately I decided to try plasti-dip on some springs... works great and looks great too.
 

luiscesaripad

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Feb 15, 2013
Messages
121
Could someone post a photo about this, please? I am really confused about how to do it.
Thank you so much!
 

sanderhermans

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Nov 5, 2013
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1,091
Location
belgium
Could someone post a photo about this, please? I am really confused about how to do it.
Thank you so much!

100's of youtube examples for putting foam and such inside of the springs. Plasti dip is just a spray you put on. Foam inside the trem cavity is pretty straight foreward, just put it in there.
 

sanderhermans

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Nov 5, 2013
Messages
1,091
Location
belgium
Noiseless springs from fu-tone.com. The fu stands for Floyd Upgrades and not the other fu, haha. They are amazing and work perfectly. I hate the problem you describe and have had it on a couple of guitars. Not anymore. Be aware you may need to file off the coating where the spring contacts the bridge block and the screw claw though. I had all kinds of weird grounding problems before I learned that trick. Multiple guitars were humming really loud and it was because the coating on the springs messes up the ground somehow. Easy to fix in about 30 seconds with a file. Great investment and it will solve your problem without stuffing cotton or foam inside the springs, which is another option.

Thanks again for the great tip. Fitted the new springs and they work great. And altough all of the"diy" suggestions here should work fine, these replacement springs work great and look more alegant and dureable than using foam and such.
 

BrickGlass

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Jan 23, 2009
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855
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Utah
Yeah, I've done the foam, cotton, tubing methods. Did that for years and years. Noiseless Springs from Floyd Upgrades are the winner.
 

Bob123

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Mar 25, 2012
Messages
227
Rubber tubing doesnt work very well.


I own "noiseless springs". I also figured you could simply heat shrink your springs. Coming from someone that has access to both, I can tell you both methods are completely the same noise reduction (almost zero... even when fluttering). All my springs get heat shrink now, and there's never been a reason for me to buy noiseless springs any more.

20150907_175507_resized.jpg
 
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