🎶 Unleash Your Guitar's True Potential!
The Miwayer 6 String YMH Acoustic Guitar Saddle is crafted from high-quality unbleached bone, measuring 75x3x9.7mm. This saddle enhances your guitar's sound quality, making it an essential upgrade for any serious musician. With its exquisite polishing and perfect fit for 6-string classical guitars, it stands out as a top choice for guitar enthusiasts.
B**.
Great replacement saddle
I put this in an old Ibanez SLG100N. Don't really know if the one in there was original, but it was all wonky and plastic. The first thing I noticed as I dumped the bag onto the kitchen table was the ting ting ting of the bone bouncing on the table. It also did not bend like the old one did. It fit great as a matter of fact. I centered it up after I made sure it was correct thickness and depth with some emery cloth. There is a small difference between the edges of the saddle and the width of the bridge. I will measure better next time. I can live with it though because it works AWESOMELY. Also, to prevent misspells I will try not to post with a hangover. Just sayin.
N**R
Great sounding bridge
Excellent fit sounds great!
C**N
almost perfect for yamaha f335
A little light sanding and it dropped right in to replace the factory synthetic urea saddle.Noticeably more sustain and just overall cleaner sounding than before and I didn't change the strings so it's not that
L**S
Excellent!
Once it's properly sanded to the right height, it fits perfect in my Yamaha FG830.
J**N
Radius not accurate as described
The saddle is made well but it is sold as a 12” radius. I have a set of quality radius gauges from a very reputable company. My pictures show the radius gauge numbers. Measuring the neck radius is 12”. Putting the gauge on the curvature of the saddle shows a significant gap in the middle, showing the radius differs from the product description. The pics with the 16” radius gauge are showing how that gauge fits the saddle curvature of what I purchased. The 16” also is correct for the string arch that results from this saddle. In all honesty, the guitar tunes well but the strings don’t feel quite right due to the mismatch between neck and saddle radius. For the average Joe, it’s probably ok, but for a professional who wants the guitar to be set up the best way possible, it’s not ideal, nor acceptable.
K**S
75mm Saddle - Direct Drop In for Yamaha FG Series Acoustic Guitars
Length and width of the 75mm saddle fit Yamaha FG series guitars without modification. The only thing that needs to be sanded is the bottom of the saddle for desired height. These saddles actually fit better than the factory saddles from Yamaha. I installed two - one on an FG840 and the other on an FG850.
M**R
Good replacement
I wanted to 'super-charge' my Epiphone Lil' Tex travel guitar so it wouldn't sound so much like a ukulele. This bone bridge is almost a perfect drop-in (with minimal sanding) to replace the plastic job that came with it. I knew it would make a difference but l was really surprised at how much of; more volume and sustain.
J**N
Compensated, but not correctly
Notice this is for 75mm. Pics of other sizes look difference.I'm no luthier, the difference is just plainly visible to anyone with eyes. They aren't not-compensated. You can see they are partially, I'm not saying they're blanks. But not all the way. They didn't even bother to come close with the high E string. Just forgot it I guess even thought they got the B string which the E is usually just like but opposite direction. Look at the picture more closely I guess, tho that's hard since it's offwhite on white image.I thought it wouldn't make much difference but it turns out intonation is off on that string. That is by ear, so I'm not talking like so subtle only a tuner could tell. Play the 12th fret harmonic then play the fretted note, you can distinctly hear the difference which wasn't there with the original saddle.The rest is not quite compensated as one usually encounters on an acoustic compensated saddle. So you'll be trying to sand the top to fix that, which will be my first time doing. So amateurs steer clear. Not quite so simple as sanding the bottom flat across. With the power of autism & the motivation of not having $10s to throw around, I'll probably manage it, but amateurs be warned.2nd string is done right3rd string pretty close if not plain correct4th should be in the middle but it's nearly at front where 3rd string is5th is in the middle but should be further back6th string is slight back from middle but should be all the way back.It's like they started curving torward back after the 4th instead of 3rd, so 4ht is near even with 3rd, the 5th is back where 4th should be, 6th is where 5th should be.Tho the intonation is close enough on those strings, except the 6th string. Not as far off as 1st string, but still.It feels like bone tho, or at least doesn't feel plastic. It's probably bone. Feels nice & dense. Drop it & it sounds very different from the plastic one I have. No seam or mold pouring spots. I'd bet it's bone, or at least something just as good.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago