Re: How do people play with 9 gauge strings?
My #1 is a custom built Strat, birdseye maple neck, ash body, sperzel locking tuners, bone nut, L.R. Baggs pizeo bridge, Seymour Duncan jb jr in the bridge, and a neck pup out of an early G&L ASAT in the neck position.
The action is set at what i'd call 'medium'. I'm a pretty aggressive player, and being a predominantly cover bar band guitarist, the music I play ranges from twangy country to current rock radio tunes.
I really beat the heck out of that guitar night after night, and it stays rock solid in tune, delivers sustain for days, and has tone to the bone strung up with D'Addario XL 11's.
Lots of guitars I see in music shops seem to be strung with 9's.. I suspect that's so they have that 'fast playing' feel.. the lighter the string gauge, the easier it is to set super low action, and the lower the action the 'faster' guitars seem to play.
I'm so used to the 11's and the medium action, that when I try and play a guitar with 9's it feels like it's got rubber bands for strings.
But you know, its something you'd have to probably work your way up to.. I started playing on an acoustic guitar when I was a kid, that had monster like 13's on it trying to play along with the songs I heard on the radio long before I got my first electric guitar.. i'm just comfortable with the big strings and the medium action.
I can definately see how a player who started out on an electric set up with 8's or 9's would find trying to play with 11's to be like trying to play with steel cables.
Scientifically speaking, a guitars sound is made when a piece of steel string vibrates in the pickups magnetic field, and this generates electricity. The greater the vibration, the more electricity generated. By this rational, seems like the big fat string with the widest vibration pattern would make the chunkiest tone.
But with that said.. i've heard plenty of players get great tone out of 9's.
So I dunno.