The eternal mystery that is guitar
Forum rules
For all tech discussions relating to Guitars, Basses, Amps, Pedals & Accessories.
For all tech discussions relating to Guitars, Basses, Amps, Pedals & Accessories.
The eternal mystery that is guitar
There's always something new to learn. I have a partscaster tele which I put together a while ago. Plays OK & sounds OK, but is not great. Tried a couple of pickup swaps and it was just not working out.
Fancying a baritonesque experience but lacking funds I thought it an ideal victim. I put some Rotosound 13-54s on and tuned Db standard. Eased open the nut slots and swapped a different compensated saddle in for the wound 3rd string.
Suddenly it sounds amazing and is indispensable. I mean really seriously dark swampy but cutting tones. Somehow this gauge/pitch combination brings this guitar to life.
I may need another guitar to try .008s tuned up a bit now. Mrs Random is not going to be happy.
Fancying a baritonesque experience but lacking funds I thought it an ideal victim. I put some Rotosound 13-54s on and tuned Db standard. Eased open the nut slots and swapped a different compensated saddle in for the wound 3rd string.
Suddenly it sounds amazing and is indispensable. I mean really seriously dark swampy but cutting tones. Somehow this gauge/pitch combination brings this guitar to life.
I may need another guitar to try .008s tuned up a bit now. Mrs Random is not going to be happy.
-
- Random Guitarist
Frequent Poster - Posts: 1114 Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 12:00 am Location: West Sussex UK
I've never liked a solo violin, you need at least five for a proper fire.
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Holy cow! They make .007s, I'm excited. 

-
- Random Guitarist
Frequent Poster - Posts: 1114 Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 12:00 am Location: West Sussex UK
I've never liked a solo violin, you need at least five for a proper fire.
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
The guitar.
Physically portable. Culturally portable.
As a chordal instrument it isn't quite as good as a piano but it can get remarkably close. As a solo instrument it isn't quite a violin or saxophone but can get remarkably close.
If you insist on being specific; there's always a slightly better instrument than a guitar. But the minute you allow a tiny space for wriggle room it's scary just how much turf, how many bases, you can cover.
Andy
Physically portable. Culturally portable.
As a chordal instrument it isn't quite as good as a piano but it can get remarkably close. As a solo instrument it isn't quite a violin or saxophone but can get remarkably close.
If you insist on being specific; there's always a slightly better instrument than a guitar. But the minute you allow a tiny space for wriggle room it's scary just how much turf, how many bases, you can cover.
Andy

Is it about a bicycle?
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Sometimes that sweetspot is tiny but very potent.
It also moves about.
It also moves about.
-
- shufflebeat
Longtime Poster - Posts: 9639 Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2007 12:00 am Location: Manchester, UK
“…I can tell you I don't have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills. Skills I have acquired over a very long career” - (folk musician, Manchester).
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
If you guit on it, it will tar you for life.
I shall get my coat
I shall get my coat

-
- tea for two
Frequent Poster - Posts: 4015 Joined: Sun Mar 24, 2002 12:00 am
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Physically portable. Culturally portable.
As a chordal instrument it isn't quite as good as a piano but it can get remarkably close. As a solo instrument it isn't quite a violin or saxophone but can get remarkably close.
If you insist on being specific; there's always a slightly better instrument than a guitar. But the minute you allow a tiny space for wriggle room it's scary just how much turf, how many bases, you can cover.


Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Random Guitarist wrote: ↑Thu Jan 26, 2023 11:57 pm I may need another guitar to try .008s tuned up a bit now. Mrs Random is not going to be happy.
I wouldn’t, not unless it’s a short scale guitar or you want to spend a lot of time changing top E strings. Certainly try it, but I don’t think you’ll do it for long.
The thinner the string, the weaker it is and the less tension it can take. An 0.008” string is surprisingly near its elastic limit at normal tuning (based on the modulus for standard steel). You’ve got enough of a gap to allow string bends, but tune up too much and you’ll reach the elastic limit when bending and the string will stretch and not return to its previous length.
So the string stretches, its pitch drops and the string becomes a little thinner. Which means it needs more tension and because its a bit thinner, it’s a bit weaker.
So you then get into a short cycle of bending, stretching, retuning, thinning and very shortly the tensile strength of the string is exceeded and it snaps.
To demonstrate, if you’ve got a 12-string you’ll know how often the octave G string breaks; which is normally the same gauge string as the top E string but tuned up two semitones. And you don’t normally bend strings on a 12-string, so that’s just what the basic high string tension does to the string.
I did some calcs once and you’ve got a bit more leeway for up-tuning on thicker strings. The downside of that is that the much higher tension makes them almost impossible to play!
I feel that most Teles need at least 10s on to get them sounding right and to come alive. Some will work with 9s, but 10s I feel are better, at least for me.
I tried out 12s or 13s (can’t remember which) on a Squier Strat Mini (a short 22.75” scale) in E to E tuning but the string feel wasn’t right and I went back to 10s on it.
But well done and keep experimenting!
Reliably fallible.
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Good point, I didn't consider the limit of string strengths, thx.
TBH I almost never break strings, maybe three or four times in 40 years of off and on playing.
I have some 7's arriving today, so I may get my fourth or fifth break quite soon.
TBH I almost never break strings, maybe three or four times in 40 years of off and on playing.
I have some 7's arriving today, so I may get my fourth or fifth break quite soon.
-
- Random Guitarist
Frequent Poster - Posts: 1114 Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 12:00 am Location: West Sussex UK
I've never liked a solo violin, you need at least five for a proper fire.
-
- shufflebeat
Longtime Poster - Posts: 9639 Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2007 12:00 am Location: Manchester, UK
“…I can tell you I don't have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills. Skills I have acquired over a very long career” - (folk musician, Manchester).
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Random Guitarist wrote: ↑Fri Jan 27, 2023 2:05 pm I have some 7's arriving today, so I may get my fourth or fifth break quite soon.
Their normal tension is very low. I tried some recently. In normal use they should be fine and you'll find them very easy to bend indeed (not bending them is the main issue

Reliably fallible.
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
I’m considering selling some pedals to finance a more expensive one. Part of me is very resistant to selling even though I don’t use the pedals, but you never know when they might be needed . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .
- ManFromGlass
Longtime Poster - Posts: 7379 Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2011 12:00 am Location: O Canada
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
ManFromGlass wrote: ↑Tue Jan 31, 2023 12:41 pm Part of me is very resistant to selling even though I don’t use the pedals, but you never know when they might be needed . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .
If you don't use them, sell them. Get something else that you will use, cheap or expensive. Life's too short to collect gear that doesn't get used, and someone else can be using it. That "knever know" use can always be replaced by something else IME.
I encourage playing and using, not collecting.

Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
FX pedals are a bizarre category of possession. Whenever you are selling they become almost worthless, and when a few years later you want to revisit some of the pedals you sold and get them again they are suddenly very expensive.
That's why the advice is to keep them rather than sell them. It's not about collecting, it's about having extra options in the future.
Andy
That's why the advice is to keep them rather than sell them. It's not about collecting, it's about having extra options in the future.
Andy

Is it about a bicycle?
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
I must admit I really like looking at the colourful Guitar pedals inside glass cabinets when I'm in Denmark Street.
I'd just buy them on looks.
These days I'm trying to be more mobile (as in I'd want to play in the bog lol it's the only part of the flat with no adjoining neighbour)
so I'm gravitating more towards battery operated pedals.
I already have a paisly colour Blackstar Fly 3 mini amp battery operated.
I might get a Chinese brand Lekato pedal which
most importantly for me battery operated from portable phone usb charger,
according to specs has 8IR Cab sims, Phaser Trem Delay fairly decent review on utube.
£34 on a well known auction site.
I'd just buy them on looks.
These days I'm trying to be more mobile (as in I'd want to play in the bog lol it's the only part of the flat with no adjoining neighbour)
so I'm gravitating more towards battery operated pedals.
I already have a paisly colour Blackstar Fly 3 mini amp battery operated.
I might get a Chinese brand Lekato pedal which
most importantly for me battery operated from portable phone usb charger,
according to specs has 8IR Cab sims, Phaser Trem Delay fairly decent review on utube.
£34 on a well known auction site.
-
- tea for two
Frequent Poster - Posts: 4015 Joined: Sun Mar 24, 2002 12:00 am
- Drew Stephenson
Apprentice Guru -
Posts: 27696 Joined: Sun Jul 05, 2015 12:00 am
Location: York
Contact:
(The forumuser formerly known as Blinddrew)
Ignore the post count, I have no idea what I'm doing...
https://drewstephenson.bandcamp.com/
Ignore the post count, I have no idea what I'm doing...
https://drewstephenson.bandcamp.com/
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
Depending on the event, that might be a strategy.
"Don't try to teach a pig to sing - it doesn't work, and it irritates the pig.'
Re: The eternal mystery that is guitar
So guitars and good old spandex is no longer a thing?

Next you’ll be telling me aluminininium and cucumbers weren’t a thing.


Next you’ll be telling me aluminininium and cucumbers weren’t a thing.

- ManFromGlass
Longtime Poster - Posts: 7379 Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2011 12:00 am Location: O Canada