![]() Here you find pliers, screw drivers, small files, hex wrenches, Grolsch Beer grommets for strap keepers, multi-meter for testing electronic parts, Batt-O-Meter for testing batteries, lubrication for Very useful.Įvery player needs to keep this tool in their guitar case, or else inĪn old fishing box full of music tools, like this: Jack with one hand and tighten the nut with the other. if you are working inside the guitar, you can hold the pot or the This tool can reach right under a guitar knob to tighten or loosen This tool is great for loosening or tightening the nuts that hold electric guitars together, without scratching the finish. It's made by ESP, but can be used on any brand of instrument.ĮSP guitars are made in Japan, so you ought to be able to get parts Sorry, to answer your question: Use this tool. My favorite one was Bite/Sting.īut I elected to install washers that say nothing. We've had a whole thread on this forum, with guys suggesting what else we might have printed Gibson thought it would help sell the guitars, if the buyer didn't have to guess how to use them. So they stuck those things on there to indicate what a new player was supposed to do with their pickups. Guitar, they didn't want anyone to wonder how to use the controls. Well, consider when Gibson was trying to market their new "Les Paul" What's the origin of the dumb plastic thing anyway? You could use any thin piece of veneer, and stain it to look good with your guitar's color. Later I made each guitar a switch washer out of ebony headstock veneer. Here's my Luna with her bronze washer.Īnd here's my Catalina with hers made of stainless steel: Get a "long thread" nut in the right size and install a metal washer ![]() If you must have a washer on there, get one made of stainless steel. I don't like plastic things, especially on a really good guitar.
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