dpowell wrote:paologregorio wrote:dpowell wrote:A 381 does not have a 12-saddle bridge, as it is a reissue of a 1969 instrument. A 660 does, however - as per Tom Petty's specifications.
My 381/12 came with one.

Huh...I guess it's because the 12-string version is not *technically* a reissue??? Thanks.
Never thought about that; I don't think I've ever seen a 12 string 381 from the 60s, so I don't know if any were ever made, though I suppose that one could have ordered one back in the day if so desired.
If my 381/12 had come with a six saddle bridge I probably would have kept that, but it came with a 12 string bridge. IIRC John Hall prefers the six saddle bridge. I've heard from a number of folks that the six saddle bridge provides more sustain due to the bridge having fewer, larger metal saddles, which sounds reasonable to me, though I'm not sure how audible it is to the human ear, either for most folks, or at all. My 381 has plenty of sustain to my ear, but who knows.
In a similar vein of thought, I did replace the Melitta bridge on my Duo Jet with a space controller bridge for more sustain; the latter bridge is entirely metal, and was the bridge that came with my Silver Jet guitar; the pickups, body style, and control layout of the two guitars as built are identical other han the bridge (and the Duo Jet being slightly more chambered), and initially the Duo Jet had less sustain. I switched the bridge and now they sustain equally. In the case of the Jets however, the difference was between a bridge that's mostly not metal vs. one that's all metal, in contrast to the two different Rick bridges, which is the difference between bridges with the same amounts of metal with one having more saddles in smaller pieces vs. one having fewer saddles composed of larger pieces.
As far as keeping the guitar tuned, my 381/12 stays in tune pretty well, even with my doing bends on it, though there was one Christmas gig a couple of years ago where I "retuned" my 12 string during a break after a couple of sets and a few glasses of scotch-big mistake. I
thought I'd read the tuner indicator and retuned the guitar correctly, but when I played a few notes, that guitar sounded like it had been dropped down a flight of stairs.
