Tyrannocaster
Junior Member
- Messages
- 75
I've always used the old-style vintage Strat trems, but my new Warmoth has a Gotoh 501, similar to what the Am Std comes with - two posts, and the arm has a plastic ring you tighten with a setscrew to adjust the tension, which is nice.
What I hadn't counted on is that that plastic ring insulates the arm at times while you are using the trem, and if your hands aren't on the strings (or some other grounded metal part) when that happens, you will get an intermittent connection which crackles. I noticed this because I was doing some recording of tones generated by tapping the guitar neck with high gain and then using the trem (open strings, so no fingers on the strings). Granted, this is not a common situation! In normal usage you probably wouldn't notice this.
I solved the problem by using a piece of flexible ground braid and running it under the bridge spring of the first string (the spring holds it in place), then running it up the side of the arm and locking it with a plastic tie. It's a kludge but it works, although we'll see what happens when I need to remove the arm sometime.
I'm curious to know if anyone else has come up with another way to deal with this.
What I hadn't counted on is that that plastic ring insulates the arm at times while you are using the trem, and if your hands aren't on the strings (or some other grounded metal part) when that happens, you will get an intermittent connection which crackles. I noticed this because I was doing some recording of tones generated by tapping the guitar neck with high gain and then using the trem (open strings, so no fingers on the strings). Granted, this is not a common situation! In normal usage you probably wouldn't notice this.
I solved the problem by using a piece of flexible ground braid and running it under the bridge spring of the first string (the spring holds it in place), then running it up the side of the arm and locking it with a plastic tie. It's a kludge but it works, although we'll see what happens when I need to remove the arm sometime.
I'm curious to know if anyone else has come up with another way to deal with this.