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Yep, I once built a copy of a Coral electric sitar that used the same type of bridge. Rather than as on a normal bridge where to minimize buzz the idea is to have a very small point of contact between string and bridge, on a sitar-type bridge you want to have maximum contact (but very light, to allow the string to vibrate). To allow for the change in string angle as you move to the higher frets and also for your fretboard radius, the bridge must have a gentle curve to it, rather like the cross-section of an airplane's wing, only more subtle. I remember doing a lot of sanding on the block of hardwood I used for mine to get the angle right. I mounted the block on a pair of tune-o-matic posts, and had adjustment screws coming in from the back a la Leo Quan's Badass design for APPROXIMATE intonation tweakage. As far as a bridge that could be quickly popped in, you'd probably run into intonation problems due to shorter scale length. If the guitar you plan to use for this has a separate bridge and tailpiece and you don't mind loosening the strings, you might be able to set something up that would use the same bridge posts and would be FAIRLY quickly interchangeable. Tim At 02:39 PM 5/27/00 +0200, you wrote: >has anyone ever tried to build a bridge for an electric guitar that >creates >a sitar-like effect? Even better would be a normal bridge, plus something >that can be quickly placed under the strings only when needed.