Wasn't the wound G standard on electrics early on? I think the vintage stagger of strat pickups was designed around the wound G. Blues and rock players began expanding styles with a lot of bending and that wound G was a ***** to bend. So they went to a plain G. But the plain G is much louder and brighter, so the stagger of strat pickups changed to accommodate. Feel free to correct my history cause I'm just going from memory and I may have never had it right.
Probably because it has higher tension and is heavier gauge.Someone else mentioned that. Why would it intonate better? Not doubting you. Just wondering.
Someone else mentioned that. Why would it intonate better? Not doubting you. Just wondering.
P.S. Would I be better off trying these on a shorter Gibson scale, or longer Fender scale axe?
I'm trying to follow you, but I'm not. The lower, (frequency wise), strings intonate just fine. Why wouldn't the "G" behave in that same manner?
Remember, we're talking guitars here.
I should know the answer to this, but it escapes me at the moment. I know I could "google" it, but I like tapping into this pool of info better.
Thanks;
Artie
The significance of having a plain G means you were born after James Burton.