Minininjarob Posted Wednesday at 10:45 Posted Wednesday at 10:45 Fitted one to my P and the tuner itself feels rubbish compared to the original Fender P (a recent Player edition) in that it’s a bit slacker feeling. But there doesn’t seem to be any consistency in how well the dropped note is tuned, sometimes it’s ok sometimes it’s sharp or flat. There’s no locking not on the drop adjuster and it’s not the tightest thread either so it moves easily. I’m not sure it’s any easier than just retuning the string when I need to as I haven’t check the tuning anyway. I don’t think there’s anything faulty about it I sort of expected better for £100 but I am starting to understand some things in the bass world aren’t the quality I would expect from other disciplines. Any ideas? Quote
fretmeister Posted Wednesday at 11:09 Posted Wednesday at 11:09 Mine are perfect. Problems are usually with the string stretching or getting caught in the nut or shifting in the saddles. Quote
pineweasel Posted Wednesday at 11:16 Posted Wednesday at 11:16 I've had them on a few basses and found them very reliable. This video is worth watching for installation and setup tips: Quote
Minininjarob Posted Wednesday at 15:49 Author Posted Wednesday at 15:49 4 hours ago, pineweasel said: I've had them on a few basses and found them very reliable. This video is worth watching for installation and setup tips: That’s brilliant, thanks so much. It makes more sense than the instructions in the box, despite the video looking like it was made in 1982. 😂 Quote
Owen Posted Wednesday at 21:57 Posted Wednesday at 21:57 I have them on literally everything I own. If they are set up properly they are rock solid. I cannot recommend them enough. Quote
Minininjarob Posted Thursday at 06:06 Author Posted Thursday at 06:06 I followed the video and managed to get it working great. Tightened up the tuner itself, added graphite to the nut and tuned it as they show and it seems to be great now. Thanks all. 5 Quote
NancyJohnson Posted yesterday at 15:43 Posted yesterday at 15:43 I've got D-tuners on three or four basses. They do what they do; give you an Eb and a D option. Like anything, the mechanism needs the odd tweak...I find the little adjustment screw/bolt moves with use which throws out the tuning. They're not rubbish per se, they can be a pain. Quote
Owen Posted yesterday at 17:31 Posted yesterday at 17:31 While we are discussing these, they now make an addition, which means you can drop to 2 different predetermined pitches with one unit https://www.bassdirect.co.uk/product/hipshot-doublestop-lever/ Quote
ezbass Posted yesterday at 18:38 Posted yesterday at 18:38 I’ve had more than I can remember and they’ve all been fine, one of the best upgrades ever IMO. 1 Quote
Buddster Posted yesterday at 20:33 Posted yesterday at 20:33 I'm looking for a replacement for Gotch tuners (GB5) but they've stopped making them. Anyone any ideas where to get one? Quote
Norris Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago The thread on mine seemed a bit loose and would drift out of tune with repeated use over the course of a gig. A tiny dab of clear nail varnish on the thread before tuning it sorted the issue. I always use the same brand and gauge strings, so I've never needed to adjust it since. You could probably use a dedicated thread lock fluid but they tend to be coloured (blue loctite if you ever want to move it again, red if you don't) 1 Quote
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