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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!warwick!not-for-mail
- From: cudex@csv.warwick.ac.uk (Mr K R Smith)
- Newsgroups: alt.guitar
- Subject: Re: Using Acoustic Strings on an electric?
- Date: 19 Nov 1992 08:55:19 -0000
- Organization: Computing Services, University of Warwick, UK
- Lines: 31
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1efkpnINNgo6@violet.csv.warwick.ac.uk>
- References: <18NOV199208353258@rosie.uh.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: violet.csv.warwick.ac.uk
-
- In article <18NOV199208353258@rosie.uh.edu> math1rb@rosie.uh.edu (92F07486) writes:
- >I am having trouble finding large guage strings for my electric, and
- >have always liked the way bronze acoustic strings held up over time. Are
- >bronze strings not used on electric guitars because they are poor
- >inductors (???) for creating a current in the pick-up's magnetic field?
- > Or does anybody use bronze acoustic strings on their electric?
- > What about some other acoustic strings?
- >
- >P.S. I don't think I'll mind the wound G (3rd string)...
- >
- The pickup on the guitar produces an output when the field produced by its
- internal magnets is disturbed. The steel core of the strings is the main
- source of this disturbance due to its permeability. The winding does not
- contribute to a great extent whether its bronze or another alloy. Even
- "stainless" windings (the tape wound ones we used to get which contain
- chromium) make little contribution. If the winding did contribute, think
- of the inbalance in output between the two E strings which would result.
- The main effect of the winding is to pad the string "mass per unit length" to
- allow correct tuning characteristics and balance the tensions. On an acoustic
- or semi-acoustic it will colour the sounds produced considerably by
- interacting with the resonances of the guitar, but solid
- electric instruments are intended to be acoustically "dead" in order to
- optimise the "sustain" and unless the winding damps the string badly it won't
- affect the output (the tape wound ones were the worst for this).
- The main difference comes down to the unwound G string which is easier to bend
- smoothly and resists surface wear better than a wound.
- The answer is "suck it and see" for a given make and style of string.
- My first electric was a cheap Harmony "Stratotone" picked up in Montreal about
- 1955, and if I laid the string I've used end to end ,etc.
-
- Kev
-