Steinberger T-Trem (AKA Trans-Trem) Repair, Setup & Thoughts

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Komentáře • 42

  • @thatampguy
    @thatampguy Před měsícem +4

    It amazes me that the loss of intervals kept someone up late at night 😂 I love engineers

  • @richardleerodgers5303
    @richardleerodgers5303 Před měsícem +3

    TransTrem masterpiece of engineering. A buddy loaned me his years ago I didn't want to give it back

  • @simonkormendy849
    @simonkormendy849 Před měsícem +1

    I've got a Steinberger, but it's one of the Gibson made Steinberger Spirit GT Pro Deluxe guitars, it is finished in metallic blue and features a Steinberger R-Trem bridge, really nice guitar to play, and it only weighs 4kgs.

  • @hyperluminalreality1
    @hyperluminalreality1 Před měsícem +2

    Eddie Van Halen was soldering his string windings in the late 1970's. I read that in an interview in Guitar Player or Guitar for the Practicing Musician in 1984 and did it myself. That Trans Trem is an engineering and machinists marvel. Now I want to build a guitar with standard headstock, quick release locking nut and a Trans Trem. I have seen them since they came out in the 80's, but never realized how interesting they are because because the stigma of little square headless composite guitars when I wanted an SG.

  • @tedmich
    @tedmich Před měsícem +2

    Great video Brad! I'll never complain about setting up an OFR again!

  • @mitchthemetalhead2589
    @mitchthemetalhead2589 Před měsícem +1

    New subscriber here thanks to Lyle @PsionicAudio suggesting your channel on a live chat. I had no idea the T-Trem had the transpose feature, pretty amazing! I’m really enjoying your channel, very knowledgeable and funny! Cheers!

    • @BradsGuitarGarage
      @BradsGuitarGarage  Před měsícem +2

      Welcome aboard! Lyle's the one that convinced me to make this video!

  • @ferncottageardentinny
    @ferncottageardentinny Před 17 dny

    Good watch and description.

  • @dcallan812
    @dcallan812 Před měsícem +2

    Very interesting mechanism thanks for showing the action.

  • @DeeplySceptical
    @DeeplySceptical Před měsícem

    Select the neck pickup and turn down treble to tune the guitar. As always, learning useful things from your videos. Thanks!

  • @maxvockner
    @maxvockner Před měsícem

    That’s an ingenious trem❤. The simple projects always go fuct. That shape and lube and nut talk 😂😂good job my brain hurts

  • @frankjauernick
    @frankjauernick Před měsícem

    Phenomenal System ! ❤

  • @victorbeebe8372
    @victorbeebe8372 Před měsícem

    Mahalo Brad! Very interesting.

  • @jamesunderhill1603
    @jamesunderhill1603 Před měsícem

    Very interesting, good explanation of the workings and it must have been a nightmare to design

  • @JaniceNitti-lb5uk
    @JaniceNitti-lb5uk Před měsícem

    Hi Brad,
    You impressed the hell outa me on this one.Your mechanical knowledge and attention to detail is stellar. You might not be a rocket scientist, but I have no doubt you could be if you wanted!!!
    You make me want to move to Australia just so you could work on my gear.
    Absolute best amp repair channel on the internet!!!
    You are the champion, not
    Us (-:

  • @will5150
    @will5150 Před měsícem +1

    I remember Allan Holdsworth and Vito Bratta playing these.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Před měsícem +1

      Steinberger basses were likely more popular than their guitars; I remember seeing Andy West of the (Dixie) Dregs playing one, and Jorge Calderon (Warren Zevon, David Lindley) as well.

  • @siriusamplification
    @siriusamplification Před měsícem

    how cool!

  • @robertbarnes9745
    @robertbarnes9745 Před měsícem

    What a truly innovative invention, if that's not redundant. Who knew??

  • @Espjr215
    @Espjr215 Před měsícem +1

    Summer Nights from Van Halen is good example of this bridge in use.

  • @Satchmoeddie
    @Satchmoeddie Před měsícem

    If it's sleazy, take it easy. If it's easy, take it twice.

  • @PsionicAudio
    @PsionicAudio Před měsícem +2

    Noice

    • @robertbarnes9745
      @robertbarnes9745 Před měsícem +1

      It wants to know if I want an English translation!

    • @halvach1998
      @halvach1998 Před měsícem +1

      Google translates it as 'Noise' - fail

    • @baabaabaa-yp2jh
      @baabaabaa-yp2jh Před měsícem +2

      Go watch Kath and Kym !!
      You ll even learn to make gourmet snags!
      Noice!!

  • @joemcgraw5529
    @joemcgraw5529 Před měsícem

    Back in the 80s I read that Eddie Van Halen used a double Locking trem ,I thought he meant he could drop the tuning a half step or whole step by the trem arm and instantly be in a different tuning thats not the case ,but this trem can do that ? so you can bump it down a few steps and be in different tunings? if so thats ingenious !!!

  • @musicalintelligence
    @musicalintelligence Před 6 hodinami

    I am a local Steinberger fan here in Canada. Where did you get those replacement bearings you said were too loose ? I wanna make sure I don't order from them.

  • @Andy_Yates
    @Andy_Yates Před měsícem

    What a cool system! I never knew what the Steinberger trem was capable of. It is indeed, quite the engineering marvel. Also it's a bit weird to hear the strings stay in tune on the pitch bends haha. Will this do a flutter like the Floyds?

  • @mattchase3153
    @mattchase3153 Před měsícem

    If only Mesa Boogie had applied their engineering skills to the Transtrem…

  • @harmonic3350
    @harmonic3350 Před měsícem

    Thanks for this. Been wondering how this worked for decades. And I thought my Floyd was a pain. Too bad they cant lock down a half step.

    • @BradsGuitarGarage
      @BradsGuitarGarage  Před měsícem

      That's a bloody good point, mate.
      Eb being such a common tuning, I wonder if anyone has machined some custom transposing arms.

    • @JoebiWan
      @JoebiWan Před měsícem

      @@BradsGuitarGarage technically speaking you can. The centre notch on the transposing pin is normally E standard and you adjust the main spring tension knob at the back of the guitar so the pin is in line with that centre notch in E standard. So you can essentially use it like a fixed bridge and then just use the trem when you want to by moving the arm out of the centre notch. But you can tune the entire guitar down with the main tension knob so that when you use the trem out of the centre notch the tuning drops to Eb, then in the centre notch you have E standard, 1st notch up is F#, 2nd notch up is G, then 1st notch down is D, 2nd is C & 3rd notch is B. Ned Steinberger is a fkn genius & this by far is the best trem I have ever used. It doesn't do the flutters or the full slack dive bombs etc... but that's not the point 😉

  • @louiswagner4537
    @louiswagner4537 Před 17 dny

    Could I politely ask what the deal was with the G string being funny? I have a similar issue and no matter how hard I try I cannot get the TransTrem to be bang on standard when transposing up or down. It ALWAYS goes flat! I’ve done everything in terms of preventative maintenance, but I haven’t soldered the strings as of yet. Only ever happens with the G so sounds like it could be similar to the customers. Any ideas?

    • @johnbriggs3916
      @johnbriggs3916 Před 5 dny

      It's probably the string. Until about the 1970s, the G string was a wound string (hence the classic Telecaster saddles.) It's been suggested that the standard gauges for G strings are actually wrong: try experimenting with different gauge G strings to see if that helps.

  • @victorbeebe8372
    @victorbeebe8372 Před měsícem

    Aloha Brad!

  • @markspurgin8225
    @markspurgin8225 Před měsícem

    I have lot of guitars 🎸 but no Stineburger don't think i want one 🤔