BigDreamer said:i use em (though they are actually bass G strings) on my super 7-string baritone which i tune 4 octaves down and then use a few octave lowering effects to get where i need to be......
Dude, the range of Human hearing only extends 2 octaves down from a normal seven string´s B string
Said "subcontra B" is already 18Hz (1 octave under the normal B on a standard 5 tring) and is already inaudible for most. 2 further octaves down from that would be 4.5 Hz, you can very literally SEE the string going back and forth at that frequency.... the only thing any person can hear at those frequencies is noise from crappy electronics (which is a much higher frequency).... Right now I think you´re stretching the truth just a LITTLE bit
Lewguitar said:A wound G string sounds better and balances with the other five srings better!
.....
And that makes perfect sense considering that when the Strat came out in 1954, the then normal strings had a wound G. Maybe Jimi was on to something (his poles were reversed putting the G pole on the D and so on)...Hmmmm (pondering).....nahhh, it's cause he was lefty.Zerberus said:the balance is especially true of staggered strat singles, where the disproportionately high G pole causes a larrge outüput jump when sed with modern lighter sets..., the problem is that a plain G is actually the thickest core in a standard 3 plain /3 wd set, and the thick core causes that output jump in combination with the now too close pole![]()
Zerberus said:the balance is especially true of staggered strat singles, where the disproportionately high G pole causes a larrge outüput jump when sed with modern lighter sets..., the problem is that a plain G is actually the thickest core in a standard 3 plain /3 wd set, and the thick core causes that output jump in combination with the now too close pole![]()
Lewguitar said:A wound G string sounds better and balances with the other five srings better!
The only reason I put up with the lousy tone of an unwound G string on my electric guitars is so I can bend notes more easily...but the unwound G does not sound as good to me.
I use wound G's on all of my acoustic guitars and resonator guitars...I don't tend to bend notes so much on those.
Lew