Giving up on Stetsbar for now...

[Update 8/8/2009:  Decided to go with a Bigsby B5 for my Telecaster.  The downside is that it requires a number of holes to be drilled so there is no going back.   But that's why I bought this guitar.  I just want to say, there is nothing inherently wrong with the Stetsbar, it's just not really built to handle my unusually heavy strings and I really didn't want to switch back to 10's]

[Update - 8/3/2009: Eric Stets, the founder of Stetsbar responded within a few hours of my email yesterday and we also chatted via phone.  He talked me through is personal Stetsbar setup procedure and he's also going to forward some new springs to see if that helps.  He's been very responsive and helpful, but it does sound like 12's may be a bit too heavy.  I'll give it another try and see if I can get it working.  Otherwise I'll have to consider if I would use lighter strings or actually consider altering the guitar in order to add another whammy bar alternative (Bigsby?, Kahler?)...]

After installing and reinstalling the Stetsbar three times on my tele without it working properly, I'm giving up and call the manufacturer to find a "certified" installer. I suspect the unit just doesn't work well with heavy strings but here is some of my frustration...

1) you need to install a shim under the neck. Granted it only raises the neck about 1/8" up, but it also increases the angle off the guitar. I followed directions to the tee drilling all the proper holes in the shim and reset the neck. After I replaced the bridge with the Stetsbar unit, I had to raise the new bridge so high I questioned why I would even need the shim. But I continued to setup per the instructions. When done, the whammy bar barely had an inch of play. Also, the guitar sounded very thin. I attributed this to the fact that the bridge was as high as a NJ Tutnpike overpass.
 
2) next I decided to pull out the shim from the neck and use the fender patented micro-tilt neck adjustment to align the neck with the stets bar. I was able to setup the guitar with great action and it sounded much better. One problem though, no matter how I adjusted the stetsbar, the whammy was full flat against the body with no play. Basically looked like the stetsbar springs could not compensate for my heavy strings.
 
3) so I decided to bite the bullet and switch to a normal set of . 010's which the Stersbar should handle without problem. No dice. Same problem as before. 1AM last night I cried "Uncle"!
 
This morning I'm going to restore my Telecaster to it's original condition. Tomorrow I'll call the manufacturer with some hard questions.
 
I guess this is why having a good tech do all your work is worth the money. They can deal with all the headaches and aggravation.

[Update 8/03/2009: - PS. You know you have a wonderful and fantastic Wife when she is nothing but consoling and sympathetic as you wrestle with your guitar instead of doing all the things you're supposed to be doing over the weekend!]

[Sent from my iPhone 3GS]

Love Affair with Telecasters...

I've moved from Les Paul's to Semi-hollow body guitars (Johnny Smith and Carvin) to pointed headed super strats (Hair Metal Red Guild Aviator), custom 7 strings and finally ended up with Fenders  I first fell in love with a Strat and eventually a Tele.

The Telecaster was such a simple and straight forward guitar, but had a sound that just grabbed me.  Even though I'm a basic "classic rocker" the twang of the Tele is magnetic, and even lends an interesting flavor in a straight ahead rock environment.  Needless to say the Tele has been my main guitar for years... but every once in a while I want to try something different and move to other guitars to try new things.  I've finally decided to pickup another Tele to use as an experimentation guitar.  That new Telecaster (Transparent Crimson Red American Standard) is the one pictured here.   

I wanted to take a few pictures before I started to dig in.  I'm going to add Schaller strap locks, locking tuners and a Stetsbar  whammy bar. [Note 08/08/2009: I've opted to go with a Bigsby B5 for the Telecaster.  You can purchase springs of various tension, which will support my heavy strings (.012's).]  Then I'll take it over to The Music Box and have their tech (Mark Wybieralla) refret the guitar with jumbo stainless steel frets.   I use heavy strings and the stainless steel jumbos make bending tolerable. Mark does great fret work.  Finally I'm going to go with a modified Nashville configuration by adding a P90 as a middle pickup.  I haven't decided exactly how I'm going to wire this up, and routing out the guitar cavity is scary so I'll probably noodle this for awhile before I pull the trigger.

Let me know what you think...

Where were you Sept 11, 2001

This was a post from my original website, pre-blog era...

...I was in the west village this morning. I work at a financial services startup there. My entire office was standing on 7th avenue watching it. When you're in the village (lots of low buildings) The world trade center sticks out of the landscape like jack's beanstalk.

We couldn't take our eyes off of it. I wished, out loud, that I had a camera. My friend Mike said "There will be plenty of pictures of this!". Oh, I half joked, but I wouldn't be in them. Then we started discussing how the Empire State building was hit by a bomber during the war and is still standing today...

Then the first tower fell. OK now it's serious... I started walking uptown. I knew the tunnels and bridges would be closed but hoped the ferry would be running. So I'm walking.... and walking because most roads are closed and the subways were shutdown. Seems I wasn't the only one with this idea, the longer I walked the more people seem to join me along the way. Where was the Pied Piper? There was an eerie unusual calm. Some stores even setup tables out front and poured cups of water for people passing by. There are some people that are still staring past us, downtown, frozen, as if waiting for the next shoe to drop.

Then I hear someone scream... I turn around and there the second tower is crumbling straight down. Like when you're watching one of those controlled explosions you see on TV all the time it just slipped down into a cloud of smoke. The spooky thing was that as it slipped down a part of the super structure seemed to stand up... like the bones of a fish... almost like the flesh falling away from a skeleton.


Photo By RAY STUBBLEBINE/REUTERS - September 11, 2001