I must point out that the stud-mounted bridge is not the problem, as far as tiltage, as Uwe has pointed out. The version one and two of the stud mounted bridges - aka nickel and chrome, aka solid and hollowed out, aka heavy and not-so-heavy - had no tilting problem. At least the first one for sure, there is some tilting with some of the later versions, but that is more related to a bad match of stud screws with the fork. But these were essentially modifications of the the 53-56 Les Paul bridge. When Gibson realized that maybe more than a couple of guitar players were not happy with the close-enough intonation method, they went back to the drawing board and came up with what Dave is wishing they had done for the bass, in that they had a stud anchor and an intonatable bridge, like the Tbird if only they put it on right. The V3 Evertilt had its major flaw in the way they modified the studs. I actually can live with the plastic saddles, but the drop-on studs suck a fat one. In theory, if they had used an allen bolt like a MusicMan bridge, or a two-piece thing like the Tone Pros, there would be no problem at all. One could use allen bolts on an EB3 I am guessing on most, as the string height adjustment is typically minor enough that you could use a washer to lift it. So, a bridge anchor is nice, but like a Badass guitar bridge shows, not necessary.
We just need that guy from Hipshot to take care of us.