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  2. Tune-o-matic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tune-O-Matic

    Tune-o-matic (also abbreviated to TOM) is the name of a fixed or floating bridge design for electric guitars. It was designed by Ted McCarty (Gibson Guitar Corporation president) and introduced on the Gibson Super 400 guitar in 1953 and the Les Paul Custom the following year. [1] In 1955, it was used on the Gibson Les Paul Gold Top. It was ...

  3. Gibson SG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_SG

    The low-end SG-100 and the P-90 equipped SG-200 appeared during this time, as well as the luxurious SG Pro and SG Deluxe guitars. Vibrato ( tremolo arm ) tailpieces were also introduced as options. In 1972 the design went back to the original style pickguard and rear-mounted controls but with the neck then set further into the body, joining ...

  4. Gibson SG Special - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_SG_Special

    The wraparound stoptail bridge has been replaced with Gibson's standard Tune-O-Matic arrangement on the Classic and Special reissues, while the reissue of the Junior retains the original one-piece bridge. Most SG Specials (like their Standard counterpart) have a volume and tone knob for each pickup and a 3-way selector switch.

  5. Gibson SG Junior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_SG_Junior

    As a successor model, SG 100 was released in the late-1971 (with a large maple body, triangular pickguard, flat metal control plate, a black plastic-molded single-coil pickup with a flat metal-ring, and tune-o-matic installed through a baseplate/tailpiece), then SG I replaced it in the late-1972 (with a humbucker and stoptail bridge), but ...

  6. Gibson Robot Guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_Robot_Guitar

    The tuning system used on the Gibson Robot Guitar is based on the aftermarket Powertune system, which was developed by the Tronical Company of Germany. [2] The Gibson system uses the standard Tune-o-matic style bridge typical on their guitars, but modifications were made to have individual piezo saddles that transmit each string's pitch to the microprocessor. [7]

  7. Badass (guitar bridges) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badass_(guitar_bridges)

    as a replacement of wraparound stopbar on Gibson Les Paul Special / SG Special Badass was first trademarked by Leo Quan , a manufacturer of bridges for guitars and basses . Badass bridges (used on the Martin EB18 electric bass and a replacement bridge on the Fender Precision Bass ) feature individually adjustable saddles, which allows for ...

  8. Gibson L6-S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_L6-S

    The bridge is a standard Gibson Tune-o-matic, less heavy than the Schaller-made rectangular bridges from the mid-1970s, often called "harmonica" bridges. [ citation needed ] The pick-ups are not the original's ceramic sealed Bill Lawrence-designed "super humbuckers", but two humbucking pickups with four-conductor split-coil wiring—a 490R in ...

  9. Pickup (music technology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickup_(music_technology)

    H (Gibson ES-165 Herb Ellis, Kramer Baretta, later Les Paul Juniors) H-S ( Hamer Californian Deluxe , Les Paul BFG, Squier '51 ) H-H-H (some Gibson Les Paul Goldtop and Custom models, Gibson SG-3 , Gibson ES-5 Switchmaster (after 1957), Kramer Jersey Star , Ibanez Destroyer , Ibanez PGM200 )