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Using a guitar with a tremolo system licensed under the Floyd Rose patent allows for precise tuning stability, increased sustain, and the ability to perform extreme pitch bends without going out of tune.

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AnswerBot

5mo ago

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Related Questions

Can you make a sentence using patent?

It is quite patent that you are required to bring a guitar to guitar club.


Who received the first patent for the electric guitar?

Adolf Rickernbacker got the first patent in 1932 after George Beauchamp invented the first electrically amplified guitar in 1931.


Can patent agent represent a client at a trial?

If the patent "agent" also happens to be an attorney he can. Only a licensed attorney can represent you at trial.


What is the value of peavey wolfgang patent pending guitar?

What ever someone is willing to pay.


When was plugged guitar invented?

Early 1930s. First patent filed in 1944 by Leo Fender


How much would it cost to replace the entire bridge Also including a whole new wiring for the pickups and for actually sound ETC and a nut for the neck of the guitar?

This sounds like a classic "I want to exchange my bridge for a Floyd Rose tremolo" question. It is one of the most often asked and by far the most sought after of guitar configurations, whether a cheap knock-off or a decent guitar with outdated hardware. You can get an original for around $300 that comes with everything including the locking nut or you can buy a much cheaper (and probably equally useful if fitted correctly) licensed patent of a Floyd Rose type locking tremolo bridge (also often coming with everything and fitting the same template) for under $50. Pickups are from $20 each to $200 based on the sound and annotation configuration you are after and wiring is very simple soldering you can YouTube the methods. I am currently doing a complete retrofit of licensed Floyd Rose and PAF pickup set (humbucker neck and bridge) for $180 all up including machine heads, pickup rings, knobs and plates all in gold. I will be doing the bridge and nut routing and electronics myself, but you can get a tech to do it for you for between $40 and $200 depending on what you need done.


Can you put a patent in a will?

No, you cannot put a patent in a will. Patents are intellectual property rights that can be assigned or licensed to others during the inventor's lifetime, but they cannot be passed on through a will. However, the inventor can specify who should receive any income or rights associated with the patent upon their death.


Who developed the first mass-produced electric guitar?

Rickenbacker in 1931 they called it the frying pan guitar, 2700 where made.


Who invenented the electric guitar?

The first electric guitar was the Rickenbacker A-22, better known as the "Frying Pan," invented in 1931 by George Beauchamp. It was a steel guitar, and used two horseshoe magnets that arched over the strings as pickups. While this is officially recognized as the first, as he was not granted a patent until 1937, he could not make the only electric guitar until a patent was granted, giving other manufacturers plenty of time to create their own electric guitars and think of ways to get around Beauchamp's patent. Production of the A-22 ran from 1932 to 1939.


What a Peavey T-60 Patent?

A Peavey T-60 is the very first guitar Peavey ever produced. It is a USA made electric guitar manufactured from 1978-1986.


Why Use a Patent Search Lawyer?

Using a patent search lawyer can save time, money and problems because they have special qualifications to manage patents, patent searches, patent applications and other procedures related to patents. In the United States, a patent search attorney must have a special license to practice or represent their clients at the U.S. Patent Office. They must also pass an examination to receive their license to practice patent law. Being licensed in this case means that your attorney is allowed to prepare and file applications for patents. They are allowed to prosecute patent applications and provide patentability opinions. A patent attorney is an attorney with special ability to represent clients that seek patents. They may work on any and all matters or procedures that involve patent law and practice. A patent practitioner in the U.S. may be either a patent attorney or agent. Those who are attorneys must also be licensed to practice law in at least one U.S. state or territory. The patent lawyer is allowed to provide other legal services to their clients, whereas the patent agent may not, because they are not licensed attorneys. A patent search lawyer is experienced in all patent matters, including how to conduct a proper and timely search to discover if there are any other issued patents in effect that might conflict with or be infringed upon by their client's patent. Using a patent search lawyer from the beginning is the best action to take because this is a person legally allowed to provide related legal services having to do with patent matters and licensing of inventions. They can advise their client about appeals of a Patent Office decision, suing for infringement, if someone else's invention is infringing upon their client's patent, or if their client's patent would infringe upon another issued patent. A patent agent cannot provide similar legal advice, nor can they go before the Trademark Office of the U.S. Patent Office to represent clients. Professionals like scientists, engineers, and law students or graduates can take the Patent Office examination and call themselves "patent agents" if they pass the test, but they cannot give legal advice if they are not also admitted to a state or territorial bar. Those who are already admitted to a state or territorial bar as a licensed attorney may call themselves a "patent attorney" and provide legal advice. Since it takes special knowledge and skill to search for and write patent information, using a patent search lawyer is the smartest decision.


Who made the first electric guitar that worked?

George Beauchamp made the first working electrically amplified guitar in 1930 who sold the patent to Richenbacher (Rickenbacker) for its production to musicians in 1932.