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Author Topic: String gauge  (Read 8634 times)

TwilightOdyssey

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String gauge
« Reply #15 on: May 29, 2006, 01:44:19 PM »
Interesting thread.

If you go with a wildly mixed set, you may want to change a couple of the saddles so that you don't get an uneven radius or playing feel. This will require a good amount of experimentation to get right.

There isn't that much of a difference between 9s and 10s, in terms of absolute string diameter. There are two significant advantages to using 9s:
1. Bending is easier (as mentioned above). The bit about legato lines is more mythology, improperly set-up guitars*, and lack of technique than sound proveable (and repeatable) science.
(* I've been SHOCKED at the terribly set up FRs I've got back from so-called 'professional' techs over the years)

2. When you bend a lighter guage string, it doesn't move the bridge as much as a heavier guage one. When you bend a string on a FR, the other strings detune. This bothers many guitar players, purists, and intonation freaks. I've found that good technique makes up for 90% of this problem, being able to mute the strings going down in pitch while keeping the ones you want to go up in pitch ringing out.

Now, as for my own opinion, I think that you get better tone from 10s, better tuning stability, and better intonation on fast runs. (Those tiny strings really flap around when you're playing fast) I've played FR-equipped guitars with 11s that were tuned down to D Standard, and I thought they played and sounded marvelous, a great way around the "heavy string - but still wanting to use the FR" paradox.

Anyway, that's my 2 cents, being an OFR user for abut 21 years now.

fps_dean

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Re: String gauge
« Reply #16 on: June 07, 2006, 09:11:43 PM »
Quote from: Jonesy
My guiter teacher said that 9 gauge strings are much better on floyd rose bridges, as oposed to 10s?...is there nay truth behind this?


You often have to screw the claw in pretty far with only three springs for 10s, but it works.  You can also use 5 springs and use 10s or 11s no problem!

TwilightOdyssey does make a good point how bending on 9s will not move the bridge as much, but whatever, us floating trem users have learned to live with that buy now, and bend two strings at once as a work around to that ;)
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Jonesy

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String gauge
« Reply #17 on: September 28, 2006, 07:18:43 PM »
Quote
You often have to screw the claw in pretty far with only three springs for 10s, but it works.


This would mean that the springs would be stretched more with 10's than 9's, where the claw would be quite far back right?

So would using 10's also result in a more flexible trem (as the further open the springs are, the easier it is to open them further via use of the trem?

Cheers
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Sifu Ben

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String gauge
« Reply #18 on: October 12, 2006, 12:10:17 PM »
Why do you want to change your nut? Surely a locking nut is a locking nut?
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