yes it can
I don't see why not , I used my friends stratocasters whammy bar on my beasts Floyd rose and it worked just fine, didn't feel right though. The best whammy bars I've had so far are 7 string ones.. longer and easier to use.
Use of a whammy bar will not damage a guitar. A Floyd Rose however does have the possibility of snapping a string because you can pull the strings tighter, maybe a Bigsby as well. Unless you're pulling up on a standard trem that hasn't been set up properly, a whammy bar won't damage the guitar.
The whammy, or, tremolo bar as it is called in formal music lingo, is a bar (usually metal) that is attached to the bridge. When you pull it (or in some cases push it) It either shortens or widens the strings. This makes the pitch either go up or down. Guitarists use it to obtain a wavy tremolo sound used often in guitar solos and dives.
They control how the wammy bar works, if you tighten them they let the bar dip and if you loosen them the bar will pull. I haven't had a strat for about ten years but as fgar as I can remember that's how it works.
Floyd D. Rose invented the Floyd Rose Tremolo at the end of the 70s. This tremolo is famous for its versatille use and possibility to pitch the note up instead of down.
because, its broke...... DUHHH
I don't see why not , I used my friends stratocasters whammy bar on my beasts Floyd rose and it worked just fine, didn't feel right though. The best whammy bars I've had so far are 7 string ones.. longer and easier to use.
you simply shake your hand on the touch screen (what you do to strum)
I would say "no" because of all the work that would be involved in changing the type of bridge so you use a whammy bar.
Use of a whammy bar will not damage a guitar. A Floyd Rose however does have the possibility of snapping a string because you can pull the strings tighter, maybe a Bigsby as well. Unless you're pulling up on a standard trem that hasn't been set up properly, a whammy bar won't damage the guitar.
how to use the slider....when a long note is played, notes you would usually use the whammy bar with, tap the note on the slider bar, and go back and forth on the bar, and it'll make a wah-wah sound(EX:cry baby wah-wah pedal)....hope i helped
The whammy, or, tremolo bar as it is called in formal music lingo, is a bar (usually metal) that is attached to the bridge. When you pull it (or in some cases push it) It either shortens or widens the strings. This makes the pitch either go up or down. Guitarists use it to obtain a wavy tremolo sound used often in guitar solos and dives.
They control how the wammy bar works, if you tighten them they let the bar dip and if you loosen them the bar will pull. I haven't had a strat for about ten years but as fgar as I can remember that's how it works.
Floyd D. Rose invented the Floyd Rose Tremolo at the end of the 70s. This tremolo is famous for its versatille use and possibility to pitch the note up instead of down.
they use machines to do it
The device on the body of your bass where the strings attach is the bridge. All you need do is remove the bridge you have and install one with a tremolo--but before you do, know that a new bridge for your bass is a couple hundred bucks, and you're playing a bass not a freakin' Guitar. Neither Geddy Lee, Steve Harris nor Gene Simmons use whammy bars on their basses; the reason they don't is a bass doesn't really need one.
"Whammy!"