Mr. B
New member
Re: Shredding with medium to high action
I've been really working on old-school shred stuff for a couple of years. Here is my take. I think it is a balance between having actions low enough so you aren't wasting effort and having it high enough so your finger doesn't lose the string during bends. When you begin to lower the action, it exposed any slop in fret leveling that the manufacturer did not address. I find it is a problem on most guitars at some point unless they are high end guitars. Guitars that never gave you a minutes problem with higher action can become buzz-o-matics with lower action.
You can get away with higher action with lighter gauge strings because the effort to fret the string is less. I usually play at very low volumes, so 8 gauge just sounds too thin and rattly to me. I have settled on 9.5 gauge as my favorite combination for most guitars. It is easy enough to bend and fret, but isn't as thin and buzzy as 8's and 9's. I play 9's on one guitar, but use balanced tension 9's. I use 10's and tune down to E flat on a couple of guitars that sound too thin and anemic with 9.5's.
I've been really working on old-school shred stuff for a couple of years. Here is my take. I think it is a balance between having actions low enough so you aren't wasting effort and having it high enough so your finger doesn't lose the string during bends. When you begin to lower the action, it exposed any slop in fret leveling that the manufacturer did not address. I find it is a problem on most guitars at some point unless they are high end guitars. Guitars that never gave you a minutes problem with higher action can become buzz-o-matics with lower action.
You can get away with higher action with lighter gauge strings because the effort to fret the string is less. I usually play at very low volumes, so 8 gauge just sounds too thin and rattly to me. I have settled on 9.5 gauge as my favorite combination for most guitars. It is easy enough to bend and fret, but isn't as thin and buzzy as 8's and 9's. I play 9's on one guitar, but use balanced tension 9's. I use 10's and tune down to E flat on a couple of guitars that sound too thin and anemic with 9.5's.