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No. It doesen't make sense to me because it would sustain both fretboards, bass and melody side, and what attracts me to the Stick is that you can play different parts on each sides. That's talking the physical Model-C Sustainiac. I've actually tried my ebow but can't make it work with the Stick, although the same ebow works fine with guitars. I've seen stickists using ebow but I suspect they don't have the PASV4 pickups. Since a year back my Sustainiac-C is very lame, due to magnet fatigue. It won't get back into shape until I send the old magnet back to Alan Hoover and order new and healthy ones. Old magnets worked ok for about three years and I don't know what gives with this new ones, so I kind of put it on the shelf for a while. Great studio tool but too bulky to bring for gigs IMHO. Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se www.perboysen.com# www.looproom.com internet music hub On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 2:46 PM, Johannes Korn <jenko.nashorn@googlemail.com> wrote: > Hi Per, > > have you ever tried the sustaniac with your Stick or Stick Guitar? > > Best regards, > Johannes > > 2011/4/25 Per Boysen <perboysen@gmail.com> >> >> Acoustic feedback is a very >> organic process. The Sustainiac C clamp on vibrator gadget is close to >> the real thing and I think you can learn playing acu feedback quite >> well from using it when practicing (a bit more neighbor friendly). >> > > -- > jenko.nashorn@googlemail.com > www.myspace.com/nashorn > http://soundcloud.com/jenko-nashorn >