Vintage Tuner Replacement Pain
Posted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 6:52 am
I love my V64. It's fantastic. It's a '99 model and has a nice deep fireglo with lovely woodgrain. It's gorgeous, sounds great, plays like a dream and is as cool as a-don't-know-what.
One thing that's been wrong ever since I got it though is that three of the (vintage Kluson) tuners are quite poor. There is a lot of slack in them and it makes tuning up much more of a pain than it should be. I finally bit the bullet and ordered some replacement (vintage Kluson) ones from RIC which arrived a while back and looked lovely and shiny. I had a spare evening yesterday and finally got round to replacing my old faulty ones with my spanking new shiny ones only to find that the holes drilled in my guitar's head are too narrow for the replacement parts which simply do not fit. I had rather reasonably (I thought) assumed they would be identical and a straight swap.
So I either drill wider holes in my guitar (never going to happen - I'm not a craftsman and I don't have tools. I work in a bank and play the guitar as a hobby) or write-off the money I spent on new tuners and make do with my old faulty ones. I am not impressed and more than a bit annoyed.
One thing that's been wrong ever since I got it though is that three of the (vintage Kluson) tuners are quite poor. There is a lot of slack in them and it makes tuning up much more of a pain than it should be. I finally bit the bullet and ordered some replacement (vintage Kluson) ones from RIC which arrived a while back and looked lovely and shiny. I had a spare evening yesterday and finally got round to replacing my old faulty ones with my spanking new shiny ones only to find that the holes drilled in my guitar's head are too narrow for the replacement parts which simply do not fit. I had rather reasonably (I thought) assumed they would be identical and a straight swap.
So I either drill wider holes in my guitar (never going to happen - I'm not a craftsman and I don't have tools. I work in a bank and play the guitar as a hobby) or write-off the money I spent on new tuners and make do with my old faulty ones. I am not impressed and more than a bit annoyed.