I was doing a test with some various trem blocks, trying to figure out if steel sustained better than zinc, or if larger blocks sustain larger than smaller ones in a Strat. For the most part my results are inconclusive, and I'm not 100% sure why.
The first complication is that when a Strat trem is activated, it's only touching the body of the guitar along the two or six screws that are suspending it in place, but when the bridge plate is at rest, the whole thing is making contact. The second complication is how tight the springs are, because if they are tighter, the bridge plate will have a more firm connection with the body at rest. I've observed that a firmer connection sustains better than a loose connection by simply pulling up on the trem arm to manually and temporarily increase the plate-to-body pressure. So how much impact a certain type of trem block exerts could be mitigated or totally drown out by these other factors.
So the question / thought experiment is, if any trem block is better than no trem block, then a bigger trem block must be better than a small trem up to a point, but what would that point be? If a bigger trem block could be fit into a Strat, there would still have to come a point where the trem block mass would overpower the rest of the wood bodied guitar, in terms of tone, resonance or sustain.
There seems to be two common shapes of trem block; the larger rectangular block and the smaller door wedge block. What I'm ultimately wondering is might the smaller door wedge block might actually be a better block by virtue of not being as imposing, by not adding so much substance so close to the saddles.
What are your thoughts?
The first complication is that when a Strat trem is activated, it's only touching the body of the guitar along the two or six screws that are suspending it in place, but when the bridge plate is at rest, the whole thing is making contact. The second complication is how tight the springs are, because if they are tighter, the bridge plate will have a more firm connection with the body at rest. I've observed that a firmer connection sustains better than a loose connection by simply pulling up on the trem arm to manually and temporarily increase the plate-to-body pressure. So how much impact a certain type of trem block exerts could be mitigated or totally drown out by these other factors.
So the question / thought experiment is, if any trem block is better than no trem block, then a bigger trem block must be better than a small trem up to a point, but what would that point be? If a bigger trem block could be fit into a Strat, there would still have to come a point where the trem block mass would overpower the rest of the wood bodied guitar, in terms of tone, resonance or sustain.
There seems to be two common shapes of trem block; the larger rectangular block and the smaller door wedge block. What I'm ultimately wondering is might the smaller door wedge block might actually be a better block by virtue of not being as imposing, by not adding so much substance so close to the saddles.
What are your thoughts?
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