🎸 Rock-solid control meets sleek style — don’t let your strings hold you back!
The guyker Stainless Steel Space Control Adjustable Roller Guitar Bridge features a precise 73.5mm post spacing and is made from high-grade stainless steel for durability. Its adjustable roller design stabilizes strings and reduces breakage, while the chrome finish adds a professional look. Easy to install, it’s the perfect upgrade for electric guitarists seeking enhanced performance and reliability.
I**U
Awesome piece of kit, love the look and the function
Super easy to install, dial in where you need your spacing, and go! Also seemed to my ears to hold string sustain a lot nicer and smoother. Using the Bigsby, the strings roll nice on the bridge all the way through. I probably wouldn't throw it on all my guitars but I love it on the arch top.
J**H
Does The Job
Works perfect on my Artist Samick HJ-650. Intonation is adjustable by slightly turning the individual string wheels left or right. Brings out slight more sustain and rings out musicality.
S**Z
Drop in fit for Streamliners with the adjust o'matic abominations
I bought this and a considerably more expensive roller bridge for a Gretsch G2655T. This is the bridge that has remained on that guitar. With a set of locking Gotoh's and this bridge, my Bigby actually gets used, and will hold tuning reliably. It also looks the part without ruining any aesthetics. There's really no need to buy all of the "Bigsby fixes," for it to work as designed. Tuners, nut, and bridge are usually the culprit, not the tremolo. I was able to turn a pretty unreliable guitar into a reliable and still very pretty guitar with minimal work. Oh, and the stainless saddles do impart a bell like zing to notes that wasn't present beforehand. Overall, I highly recommend trying this one out before commissioning one of the two best known makers to make a $125 part for a $300 guitar.
D**
Fixed IYV 350
Fatal flaw with this instrument is that after exiting the string thru grommets, the strings rest upon the back of the bridge before contacting the adjustment tabs.This kills all sustain.This gem solved the problem and now the sustain is crazy. The rollers are sized so that you get a 12-14 radius.I did have to modify the bridge so that it would fit in the slightly narrower post separation. No problem, just remove the end caps with the provided allen key to ensure the screws don't fall out and then run the end over a flat file to remove material. Go slowly and test for fit before replacing and tightening end caps. You can use the old bridge for initial string spacing.Threaded Nashville style posts are included if you go that way.All in all a versatile, worthwhile product that can find a home on lots of guitars.Hopefully the 'tubers and IYV will notice this flaw in their otherwise fine guitar.
L**A
Upgrade for Rogue VB100
I used this to replace the wooden bridge on a Rogue VB100 bass. It is well made and easy to use. It fit great I just had to drill 2 new holes in the wooden base. It is much easier to adjust than the original and is better quality.
M**E
The simplest solution are often the best
Easiest bridge I've ever used. It sacrifices adjustable intenation, but that's not an issue on my guitar. It works well and feels nice. The only issue I noticed was a bit of string ringing behind the bridge (my guitar has a Jazzmaster style tremolo so the strings stretch from it to this bridge), but that is easily fixed by weaving some a bit of cloth or similar material through the strings behind the bridge.
R**.
Comes with everything needed.
I ordered the roller bridge because I wanted my guitar to be just like Brian seltzers guitar I just put it on my bridge I already had on the guitar it fits and it was cheaper then others I saw .
D**.
Works, fits, intones and sounds perfect!
As the headline says, it worked great and solved my vibrato problems. I have a Gretsch Jet Club. I put a cheap unbranded Chigsby vibrato, Guyker locking tuners, a Tusq XL nut (virtually drop in) and this bridge and it works great. I tried the Wilkinson roller tune o matic and various other fixes like the BiggsFix, Vibramate with real Bigsby and it all went back...better but not the improvement I was looking for. All told, I ended up putting $70 into this guitar to put a Bigsby style vibrato on and it works every bit as well as my bandmate's $3K Gretsches, minus of course the cachet. If you suffer from tuning stability issues or are starting from scratch like me, buy this stuff. Getting vintage vibrato's to work is for intermediate to advanced tinkerers, be forewarned!
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