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String brands you don't jive with.

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  • String brands you don't jive with.

    A long time ago I started using Dean Markley Blue Steel strings. I liked them a lot, they lasted a while, and felt/sounded right to me.
    About 3-4 years ago I had trouble finding them. Not sure what was going on but the availability was weird,
    so I decided to try Ernie Ball Slinky's since they were readily available, and a ton of people play them.
    I could not get used to the way they felt and sounded. It felt like I was out of tune when I wasn't.
    I ended up switching out to D'addario XL's, and everything was good again. They became my strings of choice since they sounded good to me, lasted a while, and are relatively cheap.

    I bring this up because I bought a guitar last week, and the PO had Slinky's on it. I played it for a few days, and loved the guitar. But it still seems like it wasn't quite right. Tonight I swapped the strings to XL's, and all is right in the world.

    Not sure if it's just me, or if the tension or some other characteristic is just not right for me, but I don't like Ernie Ball Slinky's. I know a ton of people sound great with them, but I can' get along with them.

    Anybody else have brands of strings that just don't work for you?
    "If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough" -Mario Andretti

    "Cuz we both know I'm just a lost cause, a wannabe poet with a cheap guitar, begging for applause"

  • #2
    Thomastik-Infeld. Super high tension, and they look like they're heat treated. Also - expensive as hell.
    aka Chris Pile, formerly of Six String Fever

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    • #3
      Traditional Elixers...the acid in my hands eats off the coating leaving white dandruff all over my clothes and guitar case. And they feel sticky to me.
      Administrator of the SDUGF

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      • #4
        Funny, the ones I don't jive with were among the first couple mentioned; Blue Steel and Elixers. To a lesser degree, don't dig DRs as much either. I can use them, but they don't sound the best to me and they feel like dry powder to my fingers, whether they are nickel or coasted.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Mincer View Post
          Traditional Elixers...the acid in my hands eats off the coating leaving white dandruff all over my clothes and guitar case. And they feel sticky to me.
          That was my experience also with them. They also sounded duller IMO, compared to the standard nickel-plated steel wraps like Slinky, XL. Boomers, ect.

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          • #6
            I love the Thomastik-Infeld strings but as Chris said they are super expensive. I was finding them on Amazon for a while at $30 - $40 for a 10 pack but have not seen them at that price for years. I tend to stick to Boomers I have been using them for decades successfully. If I see a good deal I will grab XLs or Ernie Ball I have had great experiences with both brands. I gravitate towards Martin for the acoustic instruments.

            The only strings I avoid are Fender Bullets I have never had a good experience with that brand. They seem to die and go dull quickly. I have also had a lot of breakage with Fender strings, typically I do not break a lot of guitar strings. I also avoid anything coated, I just do not like the feel especially once the coating starts to wear down.

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            • #7
              I love the Slinky’s. Been using them forever.
              I can’t jive with D’addario XL. I did buy a 12 pack when they were on sale so I will use them. But they aren’t my string of choice.

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              • #8
                D'adarrio XL is pretty much all I use

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                • #9
                  I feel the same way about Elixirs–just can't jive with them on acoustics or electrics. D'Addario are my go to for all strings (acoustic and electric.) I have had good luck with the DM Blue Steels–seem to be able to find them on eBay (they are my dad's favorite strings.)

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                  • #10
                    DRs and any "handwound" string are hit or miss for me... I avoid just because often you get a set that is vastly different in tone
                    “For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard

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                    • #11
                      I'm in exactly the same camp as the OP. Don't care for Slinky's, and love XL's.

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                      • #12
                        Elixirs for acoustic, D’addario for electric. Point is that Elixir play and sound fine too initially, but the coating isn’t very sturdy. So in my electrics, which het played quite regularly, the coating comes off after about three or four band rehearsals. That’s about the same interval my plain D’addarios last, and those are about one third of the price. My acoustics get played way less so here it lasts longer, hence the coating does what it should: prevent corrosion.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Gtrjunior View Post
                          I love the Slinky’s. Been using them forever.
                          I can’t jive with D’addario XL. I did buy a 12 pack when they were on sale so I will use them. But they aren’t my string of choice.
                          I also prefer Slinky over XL. My only complaint with the XLs is that they just never have offered the gauges I prefer as prepackaged sets, and EB does.
                          There are many more Slinky sets that fall within the light-top/heavy-bottom realm, like the Turbo 9.5/12/16/26/36/46(Eb),,,and Ultra 10/13/17/28/38/48(D)

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                          • #14
                            Any uncoated string. My sweat rusts uncoated strings in an hour or two of playing. I've tried a lot of different coated strings (DR, Martin lifespans, D'addario exp, etc.) but Elixirs sound and play best for me. I've been using them on my electrics and acoustics pretty regularly for more than twenty years, and they'll last about 30 hrs of playtime for me before sounding dead.
                            Join me in the fight against muscular atrophy!

                            Originally posted by Douglas Adams
                            This planet has - or rather had - a problem, which was this: most of the people living on it were unhappy for pretty much of the time. Many solutions were suggested for this problem, but most of these were largely concerned with the movements of small green pieces of paper, which is odd because on the whole it wasn't the small green pieces of paper that were unhappy.

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                            • #15
                              I'm D'addario %100 right now on all my gigging guitars (like 6-7 regulars), i like EB slinkys, but Ive always had string breakage issues with them -I don't trust them to play on stage.

                              Ive done a lot of Dean Markley Jazz 12s too -especially in the 90s.

                              As far as electric -I go D'Addario Phosphor Bronze.
                              “For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard

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