evertune and vibrato

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JMP2203

JMP2203

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how the evertune feels and react to your vibrato?, also which is the material of the bridge and saddles?
 
there are two modes and its very easy to switch between them. one is exactly the same as any other bridge where its very easy to get vibrato as normal. the fixed setting is where there is no vibrato, perfect for tracking rhythm guitars. it just depends on how you set it but if you want vibrato its feels and sounds exactly the same as other bridges.

really an amazing piece of gear.
 
sleewell2":2gpo79ut said:
there are two modes and its very easy to switch between them. one is exactly the same as any other bridge where its very easy to get vibrato as normal. the fixed setting is where there is no vibrato, perfect for tracking rhythm guitars. it just depends on how you set it but if you want vibrato its feels and sounds exactly the same as other bridges.

really an amazing piece of gear.

^^^^^^

All true but what if your rythym guitar needs vibrato? :confused:
 
well then switch to the regular mode. its as easy as turning a tuning knob. there are lots of videos about this on youtube.
 
maddnotez":1qjbd7om said:
sleewell2":1qjbd7om said:
there are two modes and its very easy to switch between them. one is exactly the same as any other bridge where its very easy to get vibrato as normal. the fixed setting is where there is no vibrato, perfect for tracking rhythm guitars. it just depends on how you set it but if you want vibrato its feels and sounds exactly the same as other bridges.

really an amazing piece of gear.

^^^^^^

All true but what if your rythym guitar needs vibrato? :confused:

All true but what if your rythym guitar needs to be interesting? :confused:

I'm glad albums by Zeppelin, Queen, Hendrix, Van Halen, etc. didn't have that.



Just giving you a hard time. Different strokes and all.
 
sleewell2":d8cskgyb said:
well then switch to the regular mode. its as easy as turning a tuning knob. there are lots of videos about this on youtube.

Then what would be the point of having an evertune? :confused:

Makes me wonder, why didn't they name this thing Neverbend?
 
Why do people get this confused so much ? It works both ways guys , you can set it to be able to bend or you can set it to not respond to bends, it's that simple. Either way you set it your guitar will stay in perfect tune...

The point in setting it to not respond to bends is so that you can play tight rhythm on a recording and not worry about your fingers possibly moving the strings ever so slightly out of tune. It would come in handy when playing very modern tight metal rhythms that does not have bends. Wouldn't be the best set that way for blue's rhythms and 80s rhythm stuff that has bends within the riffs but you have both options available.
 
the4thlast1":app065om said:
Why do people get this confused so much ? It works both ways guys , you can set it to be able to bend or you can set it to not respond to bends, it's that simple. Either way you set it your guitar will stay in perfect tune...

The point in setting it to not respond to bends is so that you can play tight rhythm on a recording and not worry about your fingers possibly moving the strings ever so slightly out of tune. It would come in handy when playing very modern tight metal rhythms that does not have bends. Wouldn't be the best set that way for blue's rhythms and 80s rhythm stuff that has bends within the riffs but you have both options available.

im not asking about bending, its the feel and response to vibrato, check this

https://forum.fractalaudio.com/threads/ ... em.104820/
 
JMP2203":3fwzp2o5 said:
the4thlast1":3fwzp2o5 said:
Why do people get this confused so much ? It works both ways guys , you can set it to be able to bend or you can set it to not respond to bends, it's that simple. Either way you set it your guitar will stay in perfect tune...

The point in setting it to not respond to bends is so that you can play tight rhythm on a recording and not worry about your fingers possibly moving the strings ever so slightly out of tune. It would come in handy when playing very modern tight metal rhythms that does not have bends. Wouldn't be the best set that way for blue's rhythms and 80s rhythm stuff that has bends within the riffs but you have both options available.

im not asking about bending, its the feel and response to vibrato, check this

https://forum.fractalaudio.com/threads/ ... em.104820/
If you want it try one out. I had one but returned it because of QC issues with the guitar itself.

I did not hate the evertune but I could care less if I ever get one again. My guitars hold tune fairly well on their own and the ET was a little bit wonky on the vibrato and bends from what I can remember. I will admit I did a basic setup and maybe if you become a pro at setting up the ET there are no issues. I feel it is a cool thing and innovative but may not stand the test of times like the Floyd has.
 
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