Wound 6th string? Pro vs. Con (E9th)
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Wound 6th string? Pro vs. Con (E9th)
Bobby Lee said to start a new thread on this subject here, not on a previous posting.
Sooooo--> The pro and cons are?
The wound string may sound slightly better, pull more evenly with the third string,Con: goes dead much faster,increases pedal action and travel (a lot).
What do some of you use and how do you feel about wound vs. unwound. I'm assuming the guages to be either .020 or .022 with either string. Yes, Lloyd uses wound, old Sho-Buds and the P-P Emmons guitars, along with the perminent (solid finger guitars) seem to handel the wound strings well, not so with several newer "all Pull" guitars it seems.
Your opinions and experiences are welcomed and may influence future string manufactures to help give you the product you need.
Bobbe <FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by BobbeSeymour on 03 October 2002 at 07:47 PM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by BobbeSeymour on 03 October 2002 at 07:51 PM.]</p></FONT>
Sooooo--> The pro and cons are?
The wound string may sound slightly better, pull more evenly with the third string,Con: goes dead much faster,increases pedal action and travel (a lot).
What do some of you use and how do you feel about wound vs. unwound. I'm assuming the guages to be either .020 or .022 with either string. Yes, Lloyd uses wound, old Sho-Buds and the P-P Emmons guitars, along with the perminent (solid finger guitars) seem to handel the wound strings well, not so with several newer "all Pull" guitars it seems.
Your opinions and experiences are welcomed and may influence future string manufactures to help give you the product you need.
Bobbe <FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by BobbeSeymour on 03 October 2002 at 07:47 PM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by BobbeSeymour on 03 October 2002 at 07:51 PM.]</p></FONT>
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Hello Bobbe, I use SIT strings with A GHS Boomer 22W and I can lower it a whole tone.
The Boomer seems to have a little less travel
than other wound strings that I've used and
this is on a "89 JCH". Alot a guys say that the 5th & 6th string sound better together if they are both plain, so that's why I tried the boomer 22w. Bottom line is what each one likes.
Tony
The Boomer seems to have a little less travel
than other wound strings that I've used and
this is on a "89 JCH". Alot a guys say that the 5th & 6th string sound better together if they are both plain, so that's why I tried the boomer 22w. Bottom line is what each one likes.
Tony
- Frank Estes
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Hi Bobbe,
I've been playing for about 40 years now and I feel the same way as you do about sho-buds, I love em, wood neck and all. I have always used 22 wound for the sixth. I have had a couple of Emmons guitars, both PP's and a ZB custom and a Sierra and they did not handle the 22 wound, so I used a 22 plain on those guitars. But my preference will always be a sho-bud, wooden necks and 22 wound for the sixth.
Gene H. Brown
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If You Keep Pickin That Thing, It'll Never Heal!
I've been playing for about 40 years now and I feel the same way as you do about sho-buds, I love em, wood neck and all. I have always used 22 wound for the sixth. I have had a couple of Emmons guitars, both PP's and a ZB custom and a Sierra and they did not handle the 22 wound, so I used a 22 plain on those guitars. But my preference will always be a sho-bud, wooden necks and 22 wound for the sixth.
Gene H. Brown
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If You Keep Pickin That Thing, It'll Never Heal!
- Larry Bell
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I use a 022 or 024 wound on my Fessy and a 022P on my push-pull. I don't find that the wound string goes dead much faster. The plain string is much more susceptible to temperature effects and has a bunch of overtones that make it more difficult to tune. If you look at the wound on a strobe tuner, the fundamental is much stronger and I think that contributes to it sounding better. As I mentioned in the other thread, I raise and lower the 6th a full tone and the Fessy handles both without a problem.
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<small>Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2000 Fessenden S-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro
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<small>Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2000 Fessenden S-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro
- Bob Lawrence
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- Ricky Davis
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These are all great inputs on the wound 6th string.....as I use a wound 6th on my Fulawka(it's a new guitar)and the travel is Not longer..it's what ever you want it to be.
It rings as long as the rest of the strings...then when they all go dead...I change them. There is not the tuning problems with the wound as there is with the plain. It sounds even better than the plain; cause the non-overtones make it sound/blend better in tune with the other strings next to it. It will lower 2 whole tones on the Fulawka if I wanted that change but choose 1 whole tone; but it will not lower a whole tone on some guitars because of the changer design. Speaking of changer design.....as Jim pointed out....if you use a wound 6th; you will cut down on the drop of the 5th string next to it; as you raise only the "b" pedal...simply because you don't have to put alot of stress on a wound string to raise it as you do for a plain string...so therefore you are not pulling down on the changer axle as hard on the "B" pedal raising a wound string...so now the strings next to it won't go as much flat.....
I see NO cons about a wound 6th string...and I see NO pros about a plain 6th string....and so I'm done babbling.
Ricky
It rings as long as the rest of the strings...then when they all go dead...I change them. There is not the tuning problems with the wound as there is with the plain. It sounds even better than the plain; cause the non-overtones make it sound/blend better in tune with the other strings next to it. It will lower 2 whole tones on the Fulawka if I wanted that change but choose 1 whole tone; but it will not lower a whole tone on some guitars because of the changer design. Speaking of changer design.....as Jim pointed out....if you use a wound 6th; you will cut down on the drop of the 5th string next to it; as you raise only the "b" pedal...simply because you don't have to put alot of stress on a wound string to raise it as you do for a plain string...so therefore you are not pulling down on the changer axle as hard on the "B" pedal raising a wound string...so now the strings next to it won't go as much flat.....
I see NO cons about a wound 6th string...and I see NO pros about a plain 6th string....and so I'm done babbling.
Ricky
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I have used a wound .022 on my MSA for many years, and I am well pleased with it. I use the GHS BR22, which is what they call a "brite". It is a stainless steel, but all my other wound strings are semi-flat nickel. I lower the sixth string only a half-tone with a left vertical knee lever. I can see where there would be a problem with lowering more than a half-tone.
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- Roy Thomson
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I switched to D9th for about 4 months and I
used a wound 024 in the 6th position. It just
seemed too "taut" and I could not adjust to the "feel" of it. I kept putting new strings on there but it was still lifeless.
Last week I came back to E9th and have my 022
plain back. I tried a 022 wound but it reminded me when I was a "kid" and we used to make bows and arrows and we would use a peice of string on the bow. Have you been there?
With the o22 plain now I can play again. There is a brightness/effortless sustain to the plain string that I like and it lasts longer too.
I do not lower that string and I never think about cabinet drop.
It has got to be a personal thing because Lloyd Green just can't be wrong.
used a wound 024 in the 6th position. It just
seemed too "taut" and I could not adjust to the "feel" of it. I kept putting new strings on there but it was still lifeless.
Last week I came back to E9th and have my 022
plain back. I tried a 022 wound but it reminded me when I was a "kid" and we used to make bows and arrows and we would use a peice of string on the bow. Have you been there?
With the o22 plain now I can play again. There is a brightness/effortless sustain to the plain string that I like and it lasts longer too.
I do not lower that string and I never think about cabinet drop.
It has got to be a personal thing because Lloyd Green just can't be wrong.
- Whip Lashaway
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Hey Bobbe, I've been using an even tension string setup on my guitars for years. I don't experience the troubles that have been listed. My gauges are 1-F#-.010 2-C#-.013 3-G#-.009 4-E-.011 5-B-.015 6-G#-.018 7-F#-.022W 8-E-.024 9-B-.032 10-G#-.040 11-E-.050 12-B-.070 . I hear some say that the Sierra's have a more mellow tone, but with this setup I get a real good tone. I don't have cabinet drop trouble, it stays in tune, pedals and levers work easy. What do you think?
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Whip Lashaway
Sierra E9/B6 12 string
Sierra E9/B6 14 string
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Whip Lashaway on 04 October 2002 at 07:10 AM.]</p></FONT>
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Whip Lashaway
Sierra E9/B6 12 string
Sierra E9/B6 14 string
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Whip Lashaway on 04 October 2002 at 07:10 AM.]</p></FONT>
- Erv Niehaus
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I play a 27 yr old MSA tuned to D#9th. I use a 24 wound for the 6th. Easier to tune and sounds better to me. Don't notice any greater decline in the strings life, either.
My downsides are finding strings for the tuning - sets are just not available as well as some of the guages I use are hard to find.
Gary
My downsides are finding strings for the tuning - sets are just not available as well as some of the guages I use are hard to find.
Gary
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I like a plain 6th string on my D-12 'cause it gives me six plain and six wound strings on both necks for symmetry. (I have two chromatics on top of my C6.)
I recently strung my guitar with two sets of the same gauge E9/B6 strings. Just had to add a .034 for the 9th string D and remove the .068 on the E9 side.
I recently strung my guitar with two sets of the same gauge E9/B6 strings. Just had to add a .034 for the 9th string D and remove the .068 on the E9 side.
- Erv Niehaus
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Donny:
Yes, I only do a half to raise on the 6th. I did everything I could but I couldn't make a wound string work. I was getting pretty close but the throw was so long, I finally gave up. Also, that lowering spring was getting stretched out so far that it made my knee lever hard to push.
Erv<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Erv Niehaus on 04 October 2002 at 11:33 AM.]</p></FONT>
Yes, I only do a half to raise on the 6th. I did everything I could but I couldn't make a wound string work. I was getting pretty close but the throw was so long, I finally gave up. Also, that lowering spring was getting stretched out so far that it made my knee lever hard to push.
Erv<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Erv Niehaus on 04 October 2002 at 11:33 AM.]</p></FONT>
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Based on my experience with a wound 6th string on the Bb6th, (which is the interval relative to that of an E9th 6th string) and including the E9th/B6th Universal and the new Millennium, I find the wound string to be easier to tune, it stabilizes on pitch quicker when either watching the tuner or tuning by ear, it sounds better (fuller and more balanced between plain and wound strings), the guitar plays in better tune, and the longevity of the string is essentially the same.
When taking these advantages (and others previously mentioned) into account, the slightly longer travel is insignificant when compared to the advantages of the wound string.....at least for me.
When taking these advantages (and others previously mentioned) into account, the slightly longer travel is insignificant when compared to the advantages of the wound string.....at least for me.
- Gary Lee Gimble
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- Bobby Lee
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Reminds me somehow of Buddie Emmons.<SMALL>I like a plain 6th string on my D-12 'cause it gives me six plain and six wound strings on both necks for symmetry.</SMALL>
Back to the topic. Every time I get a new guitar, I try a plain 6th string on it. Invariably, I switch to wound. I just don't like the tone of those thick plain strings. To my ear, they have strange overtones. They seem more like paper clips than music wire.
Bobbe, I've never noticed my wound G# going dead any faster than the rest of the strings on the guitar. Generally, the plain strings are dead before the wound ones.
I tried the GHS BR22 that Bob Farlow recommends, and it does sound a bit better than the Jagwire nickel wound. Lately I've been using a Jagwire stainless .022, with nickel for the rest of the wounds. The stainless 6th string bridges the tone difference between the plain and wound strings nicely. I prefer the sound of nickel for the lower strings.
I don't lower my 6th string a full step, so travel isn't really an issue for me.
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<small><img align=right src="http://b0b.com/b0b.gif" width="64" height="64">Bobby Lee - email: quasar@b0b.com - gigs - CDs
Sierra Session 12 (E9), Williams 400X (Emaj9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (F Diatonic), Sierra Laptop 8 (D13), Fender Stringmaster (E13, A6), Roland Handsonic<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Bobby Lee on 04 October 2002 at 11:50 AM.]</p></FONT>