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You will still need conversion bushings though, so it won’t give the ‘correct’ vintage appearance.
I thought about doing that on my Gibson Dove, but in the end I replaced the nickel kidney-bean Rotomatics with chrome keystone Rotomatics… it almost seemed a bit pointless until after I’d done it - the improvement is *huge* visually (the Dove is a 60s design not 50s, so chrome keystones are the *right* type - Gibson, pay attention!) and I dislike nickel anyway. But even more remarkably, the keystone keys are a lot lighter than the kidney beans, and it noticeably improved the sound of the guitar - MrsICBM heard it straight away too, it’s not just my imagination. (I reused the same strings, to make sure it wasn’t that!)
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
not a Martin headstock obvs. but show's the vast improvement IMHO, especially on a smaller Martin
so how does the M-series sound ? personally Id got the other way, small body, deep - but interesting to hear what the M is like
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
If it were mine, I’d be swapping those big Grovers out for the like-for-like replacement, Gotoh SG301 (both ovaloid and Grover style buttons available).
Of course, none of that matters if you really don’t like the style. However the SG301s are a lot less bulky and so much more superior to Grovers.
2004 Yamaha LL-500
1995 Yamaha LA-8
Yes @Teyeplayer Grovers are the standard Maton tuner fitted to all models.
Like others here, I well remember seeing closed-back tuners as something new and rather posh. I've come to just expect them as routine these days and don't quite get the open-back love you see around. That said, I don't pay much attention to the back of headstocks: thinking about it just now I was reasonably confident that my lot are all closed back except the Guild - but I actually had to go and look to be sure.
But to contradict myself, the look of tuners needs to match the guitar. The soft curves of the headstock in Bertie's picture positively demand a curvy, classic-style tuner (open-back or closed-back, doesn't matter). The treble-side tuners on it look awful - but they would be fine on something with a more angular, modern vibe.
The view from the front of the guitar matters more to me. From that point of view, closed-back vs open-back is a non-issue, but the shape and colour of the pegs needs to suite the shapes and the timbers.
(Still scratching my head over the reports of changed sound.)
The Grover kidney-bean keys are *really* heavy - the heaviest of any tuners I know of.
My experience in general is that more mass at the headstock gives a deeper and more scooped sound, less mass gives more midrange - that’s definitely the difference I heard.
MrsICBM is *reasonably* normal, but does have a lot of experience of me asking her to listen carefully to sounds .
I also completely agree about the look - and the feel of the keys - the main reason I changed them is because the nickel kidney-beans were just clunky and wrong, whereas the chrome keystones are perfect (in particular they match the shape of the headstock inlay). The tone change was a bonus, although I did expect it.
I’m also not really a fan of open-gear tuners, although they’re OK on vintage guitars which came with them. I generally like modern ones, but they don’t look right on the guitar above - the angular metal keys don’t look right on any older guitar design, and they never did even when people were fitting Schaller M6s to them in the 1970s either…
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
So, to test this theory, I could (with suitable care) attach (say) a metal G clamp from my workshop to the head of a guitar and listen to the tone change - maybe turn my Adi and 'hawg Guild into something more akin to a rosewood OM-28! I can't wait to try it. (Also, to try the brass bridge pins which arrived the other day and are still in the packet.)
Article with pics here https://www.guitarscanada.com/threads/have-you-ever-heard-of-fathead-for-peg-head.267491/
I'd bet there's more than one person here on TFB that will have one in a parts drawer