Bridge lift on the 4003S/5 SPC - advice, please!
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jeff_ulmer
- Intermediate Member
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I really like the similarity of the Hipshot to the original Rick piece.
. . . then you'll REALLY like our new assembly ( 4 & 5) when it's done.
I wouldn't put much trust in that if you can get it back into shape.
I really agree with Jeff on this one. You might want to check with Kenny to see if there's one of these somewhere.
. . . then you'll REALLY like our new assembly ( 4 & 5) when it's done.
I wouldn't put much trust in that if you can get it back into shape.
I really agree with Jeff on this one. You might want to check with Kenny to see if there's one of these somewhere.
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jwr2
I can make one from a 4 string one and you can get it sandblasted and powder coated black ... it should look 95% like the original except for the pullup ... but if you can find a real s5 black tailpiece then go for it ...
and I agree with John ... that tailpiece looks to have deformed plastically ... in layman's terms ... you may never get that metal back into its original shape ...
and I agree with John ... that tailpiece looks to have deformed plastically ... in layman's terms ... you may never get that metal back into its original shape ...
- atomic_punk
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jwr2
I agree with your assessment. Ween metal moves like that, it does so on atomic-level defects in the crystal structure (often along grain boundaries). Such movements are usually irreversible, and moving it back just moves it through a new set of defects, which creates yet another new set of defects. Too bad it doesn't exhibit hysteresis like memory metal!
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
- incubus2432
- Senior Member
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Update: here is what the lift looks like now after 26 days of gradual clamping:
Still not quite at the end, but it's getting there. The lift is now about 3 mm.
It also remains to be seen whether this process has cracked the metal on the underside. I plan on looking carefully at the bottom under a stereomicroscope at work at the end of the clamping process.
Still not quite at the end, but it's getting there. The lift is now about 3 mm.
It also remains to be seen whether this process has cracked the metal on the underside. I plan on looking carefully at the bottom under a stereomicroscope at work at the end of the clamping process.
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
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jwr2

