Jag/short scale string choice...
Moderated By: mods
Jag/short scale string choice...
What are people here using... ?
Put on some roto reds 11-14-18-28-38-48 but seemed slightly too light for what I was after.
Then put some beefy slinkys on 11-15-22p-30-42-54 and they seemed a little too heavy for general bending etc plus slinkys are rubbish !!
Anyone found a nice match... ?? recommended brand ?
next stop for me will be a set of dean markley MED .011 .013 18p .030 .042 .052
Crap thread I know ....
thanks
O
Put on some roto reds 11-14-18-28-38-48 but seemed slightly too light for what I was after.
Then put some beefy slinkys on 11-15-22p-30-42-54 and they seemed a little too heavy for general bending etc plus slinkys are rubbish !!
Anyone found a nice match... ?? recommended brand ?
next stop for me will be a set of dean markley MED .011 .013 18p .030 .042 .052
Crap thread I know ....
thanks
O
- analogsystem
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Though it will get me thrown off the boards to say so, I use Ernie Ball straings. I like them best because they're made of metal, and they're long and shiny.
On shortscales I use a set of "Elevens," which go from .011 up to whatever size Ernie Ball elevens go to. I often use a .012 for the high E string however, otherwise it sounds a little wimpy compared to the other strings. (I do something similar on Stratocaster: a set of "Tens" with an .011 for high E.)
I use heavier strings on shortscales to keep them closer to the same tension as strings on a "full" scale Fender. That helps balance out the poppy attack sound and gives better sustainz.
On shortscales I use a set of "Elevens," which go from .011 up to whatever size Ernie Ball elevens go to. I often use a .012 for the high E string however, otherwise it sounds a little wimpy compared to the other strings. (I do something similar on Stratocaster: a set of "Tens" with an .011 for high E.)
I use heavier strings on shortscales to keep them closer to the same tension as strings on a "full" scale Fender. That helps balance out the poppy attack sound and gives better sustainz.
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- Posts: 904
- Joined: Fri Apr 21, 2006 8:12 pm
I bought 3 packs of dean markleys... they had better be as good as I remember...
These will also have a wound 20 G
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll? ... IBSA:UK:31
These will also have a wound 20 G
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll? ... IBSA:UK:31
Tens all the way, man - suits me anyway.
I've got the same on Jag, Tele, Gretsch, LP Junior etc - all different scales, all feel fine in their own way.
I might be out on a limb here, but I reckon guitars should feel different from each other - so varying string gauge to uh...equalize 'em doesn't hold much attraction for me.
I've got the same on Jag, Tele, Gretsch, LP Junior etc - all different scales, all feel fine in their own way.
I might be out on a limb here, but I reckon guitars should feel different from each other - so varying string gauge to uh...equalize 'em doesn't hold much attraction for me.
Agreed.bubbles_horwitz wrote: i have never understood the whole "shortscales need heavy strings" thing. the opposite makes more sense to me.
If the instrument has a naturally slinky feel, and has shit sustain, why try to go against that. I've always put 009's on my Jag-stang, because I like it to be slinky as fuck, which is really nice with the small neck shape.
My Squier '51 has a fairly chunky neck, I have the action really high on it, and a set of 012's on it.