http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=x21fptcdzVQ
Its not as fun getting hit in the face with the string when tuning

Moderators: Randy Perry, The Flying Dutchman, Stiltzkin, skezza, Trigger
woah...how do you tune your guitar?randy will never die wrote:Its not as fun getting hit in the face with the string when tuning
Good to know... could you give a common reason? The system just not working?rhoads56 wrote:I used to do warranties for Gibson. Their self tuning guitars have a 135% return rate. That means for every 100 guitars they build (that have self tuning), on average they are returned for warranty 1.35 times.
To save weight, the tuners are made from plastic. If the self tuning is engaged, and you try to manually tune (trust me, it's instinctive... or when the battery dies) you break the machinehead.Paul Wolfe wrote:Good to know... could you give a common reason? The system just not working?rhoads56 wrote:I used to do warranties for Gibson. Their self tuning guitars have a 135% return rate. That means for every 100 guitars they build (that have self tuning), on average they are returned for warranty 1.35 times.
Tronical, the supplier to gibson, has been making self tuning systems since around 2000. The problem is they need to be intergrated into the guitar, eg: the tuners require a signal, voltage, etc etc. The strings are grounded, so that means there HAS to be plastic parts in the tuners, plus two wires minimum, to each one.Paul Wolfe wrote:Thanks for the insight, rhoads56. Now that Gibson has put the technology out there, I wonder how long it'll be until someone reverse engineers the thing, makes improvements and makes after-market self-tuners available? It wasn't long after the original Floyd Rose trem that people came up with similar products - some of which were definite improvements.
I'm confused. Are you saying a self-tuning system can never work well because of the plastic parts? There is a difference between quality plastic and cheap plastic as I know you are aware. Or is it that the quality plastic is cost-prohibitive?rhoads56 wrote: Tronical, the supplier to gibson, has been making self tuning systems since around 2000. The problem is they need to be intergrated into the guitar, eg: the tuners require a signal, voltage, etc etc. The strings are grounded, so that means there HAS to be plastic parts in the tuners, plus two wires minimum, to each one.
Im saying that Gibson, as usual, are taking the cheaper option, rather than the quality option. As a repairer, I see ten times more Gibsons than I do Fenders. They sell more Fenders though.Paul Wolfe wrote:I'm confused. Are you saying a self-tuning system can never work well because of the plastic parts? There is a difference between quality plastic and cheap plastic as I know you are aware. Or is it that the quality plastic is cost-prohibitive?rhoads56 wrote: Tronical, the supplier to gibson, has been making self tuning systems since around 2000. The problem is they need to be intergrated into the guitar, eg: the tuners require a signal, voltage, etc etc. The strings are grounded, so that means there HAS to be plastic parts in the tuners, plus two wires minimum, to each one.