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Guyker Juego de 3 monturas de puente de guitarra de latón GOTOH, 10,8 mm en sintonía compensada con llave, pieza de repuesto de alta calidad compatible con guitarra Tele TL

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $312.61

Mex $ 156 .00 Mex $156.00

En stock

Acerca de este artículo

  • Distancia entre cuerdas de 10,8 mm. Comprueba el dibujo de parámetros en las imágenes adjuntas antes de realizar el pedido.
  • Paquete de 3 sillines de latón estilo gotoh in-tune, pieza de repuesto compatible con puente estilo Telecaster Tele TL.
  • Hecho de material de latón, duradero y fácil de instalar, simplemente desenrosca.
  • Cada sección está fundida individualmente para ser escalonada, lo que permite una mejor entonación de la cuerda mientras conserva la apariencia y el tacto tradicionales.
  • Monturas de compensación de latón de 10,8 mm con accesorios de montaje completos.



Descripción del producto

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Guyker - Juego de sillines de latón compensados de 3 a 10,8 mm con forma de barril estilo Wilkinson

Características:

Juego de 3 sillines de puente compensados de latón de estilo Gotoh de 10,8 mm para actualizar tu Telecaster Tele entonación más precisa mientras mantienen un aspecto clásico. Los sillines de latón dan ricos matices armónicos y un largo sostenimiento. Cada sección está moldeada individualmente para ser escalonada, lo que permite una mejor entonación de cuerda mientras conserva el aspecto y la sensación tradicionales. Material: Latón, duradero y fácil de instalar. Espaciado de cuerdas de 10,8 mm.

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El paquete incluye:

Juego de 3 sillines de puente compensados. Muelles de entrada y tornillos incluidos. 1 llave hexagonal.


Jesse
Comentado en Canadá el 11 de mayo de 2024
Made intonation even worse
Johannes
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de marzo de 2024
Here's the bad news: Your Telecaster will never be in tune. As amazing as Leo Fender was, as breathtakingly complete yet simple his first groundbreaking design is, the classic Tele bridge with three saddles is simply not up to the task of giving you perfect intonation. What's the difference between intonation and being in tune? Easy. You can tune your guitar with the most precise strobe tuner available, get all six strings pitch perfect when you pick them open, and the second chord you play (try a D after a G chord ...) will sound janky. Why is this? The frets on your guitar force the pitch into an approximation of the right note. Since you have six strings of different thicknesses, there will always be a compromise. The idea behind adjusting the intonation (as opposed to the tuning) of your strings is that you set the scale length, which is the vibrating part of the string between the nut and the bridge, individually. Typically, the G or B strings profit from a slightly longer scale length, for instance. In later designs, like his ASAT, which is the Tele version of his G&L brand, Leo gave each string an individual saddle. In "cassic" Teles, each of the three saddles have to work for two strings. Good luck trying to nail the intonation on both the D and G strings, which usually need different adjustments! In other words, there can always only be an approximation of perfect intonation. Now, clever inventors have come up with all kinds of ways to make old school Telecaster bridges more precise. The problem is, these inventions tend to be finicky. I spent a lot of money on "adjustable" bridge saddles that only gave me new headaches. There are the ones that are slanted. Problem is, you never know which string to give the short or long end. Then, there is a very expensive "solution" which makes you first adjust the intonation for one string, then you have to go in there with the tiniest Alan wrench there is, you know, the one you can NEVER find when you need it, and shift a small part inside the brass saddle in the other direction, then try to lock it in. My main gripe with this thing was that the strings often ran across the height adjustment screws and didn't give me clean vibration. I got interesting sitar sounds, but that's not exactly what I wanted. Enter the cheap Guyker bridges. They simply do the job, and allow for a "close enough" intonation. You want computerlike precision in your tuning? Buy a Parker Fly or whatever the current most advanced science fiction axe is that Dr. Fludd is pushing. You're a Tele player, for god's sake. Do a lot of bending and call it character. At least, these won't break the bank, and they'll give you all the brass twang you need. As for the tuning: Close enough. Enjoy, cowboy.
richard
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de octubre de 2024
If you want that great Telle tone then these brass saddles are the ones. Great fit and tone. Intonation was a breeze.
Mrs Norman
Comentado en el Reino Unido el 14 de enero de 2024
These are a good quality copy of the Gotoh InTune saddles (which are the best replacement saddles available for Telecaster) at a fraction of the price. Highly recommended.
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