Re: How do you stretch strings?
Exactly :naughty:
I restrung my strat last week. I have the trem screwed down tight with 5 springs (essentially a hardtail) and have Sperzel tuners and a roller nut. I ran the new strings, pulled them through the tuning post, tightened the thumbscrew, and tuned to pitch. Four days and a few hours of play later it's still in tune, no stretching involved. YMMV, IMO, OMGBBQ.
uh, put that on youtube. i dont believe it. and even if you do, that might work just for you. i'm primarily a blues cat, and blues is about the bend and killing the strings (buddy guy, for example). i've had fixed bridge guitars/strats with fixed and floating/a floyd/tuning heads of all type/and a LSR.
fresh string with no stretching and the first bend it goes of tune.
i currently use a strat with a floating trem. i use a roller string tree on the B and E string, and i have "modern" type saddles (not vintage bent steel). i string up, tune up, slightly bend the string at every possible contact and gently pull the string away from keyboard (to save nut). so i push gently around the nut, both sides, around the tuning head, and on both sides of the roller trees. i then whammy for a bit. tune up. repeat. tune up. repeat until it holds the pitch.
i play with a keyboard player and my guitar stays in tune. but if do just one hendrix bend on a "virgin" string, out of tune. i still "attack" the strings, so i tune up quickly between each song, but i feel i can go 2-3 songs before it starts to sound "pitchy"
attach string
tune
gently stretch
tune
repeat until string holds pitch.
i'm willing to be proven wrong or look at evidence, but i'm basing this on 25+ years of guitar playing.