when I was playing the AX40 and the Peavey EVH, the floyd set back on the body was weird - I automatically want it floating for some whammy bar pyrotechnics and warbles. think I'd get it routed to be floating when I get round to buying one. crackin guitars for the cash, especially the Stering one.
Do you mean the peavey wolfgang or the fender one? i know what you mean about going for the trem to pull back, but seriously, once you get used to it, you don't miss the floating trem. with a little practice you can pull off hte same manouevers via prebending a string.
also with a flat set floyd you're getting more sustain, the capacity (as i said) to use a dtuna which i genuinely believe is on of the single greatest guitar gadgets invented, and also, if you break a string, everything else stays in tune.
the sterling guitars look great yeah, i have a beautiful great sounding axis and i'm still tempted by one.
on the subject, i had a chance to a/b some full fat wolfgangs and some specials the other day, and you know? what i would go for a special over the full fat. specials are made in japan with a flat top versus the u.s. made mild arch of the full fat. obviously the jap one is a maple veneer also but there just isnt 1400 quids worth of difference between them. i would buy the special. its a lot closer to the axis anyways and the japanese workmanship is beyond reproach.
i also miss my peavey wolfgang.. wish i'd never sold it.. awesome awesome guitar.
All in all i'd say if you want a floating trem buy a guitar with a floating trem, don't go routing a sterling or whatever because to be really honest, and people may disagree, but i think a big part of the tone your liking on the sterling is coming from the fact that the trem is flat set..