this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
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You can intonate a little flat and adjust your finger pressure. The guitar can never be in perfect intonation for all keys and even if it could I'm not sure you would want to.
So long as you are not doing a standard or drop tunig the lightning bolt will be just as good as a tune o matic or Nashville. The lightning bolt even has advantages. It won't add little kinks to your strings so you will have better intonation on broken in strings if you care about being parts of a cent on. The only issue is if you use a set of strings with a wound g or ballenced for an open tuning. If you do one those you won't be able to correct for it and would need a different shaped bolt.
I think we're arguing semantics here. You are absolutely correct, there is no such thing as perfect intonation on an even temperament guitar (check out true temperament necks theyre trip).
However I will outright disagree with you that the lightning bolt is "just as good" as an adjustable bridge. It is certainly possible to have one with perfect intonation at the 12th fret across all six strings but it is absolutely not the norm. So you have to compromise and split the difference on a few strings.
Frankly, I like the looks of a lightning bolt wrap around over an adjustable one all day. But an adjustable saddle bridge is going to outperform it in achieving best possible intonation every time.