
chunktone
Active member
I agree! I alos heard he uses 7s.bonedarrell":1mh94xsj said:richardt4520":1mh94xsj said:Myth. Billy Gibbons uses 8s and that's a hell of a fat tone!
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I agree! I alos heard he uses 7s.bonedarrell":1mh94xsj said:richardt4520":1mh94xsj said:Myth. Billy Gibbons uses 8s and that's a hell of a fat tone!
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supersonic":20vc0na3 said:Can't say what he uses currently, but when I bought my EBMM EVH guitar in '93 it came with 9-40. That's what he was using at the time.rcm78":20vc0na3 said:EVH uses 9-42's on a 25.5" guitar tuned a half step down during the DLR years. Some people think he has good tone...
Billy Gibbons is notorious for using very light strings. I think he uses 8's. Also good tone.
I like the feel of 10-46 D'Addarios. I used 9-46 GHS boomers for years until I tried 10's. They just feel right to me. No big tone difference.
It's all about what you like and what makes you want to play more!!!
moltenmetalburn":nbgd2i62 said:it is not a myth, the science of physics is real.
its all about the tension of the string.
too loose and it will have loose rubbery, modulating, tone, too tight and its too hard to excite the strings, poor sustain.
for example my dropped C 24.75 guitar is strung with .65 to .13 The scale length unit weight and string gauge were all used to calculate the desired tension which was the same tension the string would be under if it were from a .9 set on the same guitar at standard concert pitch.
Almost forgot I have as set of 9.5s' here to try. How are they?racerevlon":11dqb9l4 said:Played 9-42 my whole life until D'ADDARIO came out with the EXL120+ 9.5's. Now all my fixed-bridge guitars have 9.5's and the Floyded axes get 9-42, just cuz I don't want to re-float.
I used to buy the EVH branded guage by the box then they stopped making them. I remember you could get a really sweet virbrato on the low E and A strings.JJGray":3cvwz64u said:supersonic":3cvwz64u said:Can't say what he uses currently, but when I bought my EBMM EVH guitar in '93 it came with 9-40. That's what he was using at the time.rcm78":3cvwz64u said:EVH uses 9-42's on a 25.5" guitar tuned a half step down during the DLR years. Some people think he has good tone...
Billy Gibbons is notorious for using very light strings. I think he uses 8's. Also good tone.
I like the feel of 10-46 D'Addarios. I used 9-46 GHS boomers for years until I tried 10's. They just feel right to me. No big tone difference.
It's all about what you like and what makes you want to play more!!!
Spot on! In Ed's early Guitar Player interviews, he said he used Fender 150XL's. They did and still do make them in 9-40 gauge.![]()
Yeah Dick Dale uses something like14-58, and he strangles the shit out of his strat.fishyfishfish":1drly785 said:Not a difference in tone as much as feel and how hard you play.
When I get nervous or excited I tend to mash the piss out of my
guitar, so heavier strings work out better for me . What ever tool
works for the job.
It really is a personal thing, Billy Gibbons has dished out some of the fattest tones I've ever heard. I recall a concert back in '87 he was holding one note and the place was about to explode.Rezamatix":1rqp3tn0 said:electrophonic.tonic":1rqp3tn0 said:Yeah Dick Dale uses something like14-58, and he strangles the shit out of his strat.fishyfishfish":1rqp3tn0 said:Not a difference in tone as much as feel and how hard you play.
When I get nervous or excited I tend to mash the piss out of my
guitar, so heavier strings work out better for me . What ever tool
works for the job.![]()
thats what im talking about. and his tone is undeniable. Its thick and scary good. but I think its interesting that in this discussion the two Strat players with thicker gauge strings I can indentify with to a degree. there is MORE happening in the low end with thicker strings for me. it always sounds beefier. MUCH beefier. Im playing a 7 string with 56 on the LOW B. that shit sounds fat. much fatter than any 8.9.10's I have heard anywhere else.
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I think the difference between a 9 and 11 might be fairly negligible tone-wise. The difference between an 8 and a 12 is pretty apparent though. I personally think it's based more on string tension and pick attack than it is on string gauge. Of course PUs, effects and amp plays a huge role. I'd love to hear Dick Dale through Rev. Billy's rig and vice versa.supersonic":3kmfh4wl said:It really is a personal thing, Billy Gibbons has dished out some of the fattest tones I've ever heard. I recall a concert back in '87 he was holding one note and the place was about to explode.Rezamatix":3kmfh4wl said:electrophonic.tonic":3kmfh4wl said:Yeah Dick Dale uses something like14-58, and he strangles the shit out of his strat.fishyfishfish":3kmfh4wl said:Not a difference in tone as much as feel and how hard you play.
When I get nervous or excited I tend to mash the piss out of my
guitar, so heavier strings work out better for me . What ever tool
works for the job.![]()
thats what im talking about. and his tone is undeniable. Its thick and scary good. but I think its interesting that in this discussion the two Strat players with thicker gauge strings I can indentify with to a degree. there is MORE happening in the low end with thicker strings for me. it always sounds beefier. MUCH beefier. Im playing a 7 string with 56 on the LOW B. that shit sounds fat. much fatter than any 8.9.10's I have heard anywhere else.
![]()
Fat strings, Fat tone = Myth busted.
shgshg":y233sy0o said:moltenmetalburn":y233sy0o said:it is not a myth, the science of physics is real.
its all about the tension of the string.
too loose and it will have loose rubbery, modulating, tone, too tight and its too hard to excite the strings, poor sustain.
for example my dropped C 24.75 guitar is strung with .65 to .13 The scale length unit weight and string gauge were all used to calculate the desired tension which was the same tension the string would be under if it were from a .9 set on the same guitar at standard concert pitch.
Your example does nothing to prove - or disprove - your claim.
My point is that the "factual science" doesn't necessarily translate into better/bigger tone. The only test anyone needs to do is listen...anything else just muddies the waters.moltenmetalburn":32wxmfgq said:Variability in no way negates the factual science.
The pickups magnetics sense more metal and provide more output.
( boosting the amp inputs adds desirable compression and some breakup)
The guitar body resonates and vibrates more.
(Longer sustain ,more dynamic)
String tension directly affects the amount of string modulation happening.
( loose strings can actually produce a sort of chorusing effect)
It goes on...
Sure the players touch can add or detract from the final tone but the three example I used above are proven AND inherent long before the guitarist even picks up the instrument, plays it or amplifies it.
You may be trying to say this resulting in "better" tone is subjective. That I could stand behind, MANY guitarists sound like total crap and think its awesome.
Other than that I completely disagree with you, the facts of my testing have shown me otherwise.
Don't believe me because I said so, do your homework, break out the oscilloscope, consult l some scientists, test some strings at tension , the proof is there waiting for you to discover.
I consulted a collegiate physics professor and an acoustician friend of mine while testing theories. At the time we were designing string sets that never got off of the ground due to my busy touring schedule and actually getting beaten to the punch by another string maker.
rupe":es606raj said:My point is that the "factual science" doesn't necessarily translate into better/bigger tone. The only test anyone needs to do is listen...anything else just muddies the waters.moltenmetalburn":es606raj said:Variability in no way negates the factual science.
The pickups magnetics sense more metal and provide more output.
( boosting the amp inputs adds desirable compression and some breakup)
The guitar body resonates and vibrates more.
(Longer sustain ,more dynamic)
String tension directly affects the amount of string modulation happening.
( loose strings can actually produce a sort of chorusing effect)
It goes on...
Sure the players touch can add or detract from the final tone but the three example I used above are proven AND inherent long before the guitarist even picks up the instrument, plays it or amplifies it.
You may be trying to say this resulting in "better" tone is subjective. That I could stand behind, MANY guitarists sound like total crap and think its awesome.
Other than that I completely disagree with you, the facts of my testing have shown me otherwise.
Don't believe me because I said so, do your homework, break out the oscilloscope, consult l some scientists, test some strings at tension , the proof is there waiting for you to discover.
I consulted a collegiate physics professor and an acoustician friend of mine while testing theories. At the time we were designing string sets that never got off of the ground due to my busy touring schedule and actually getting beaten to the punch by another string maker.
I'm not saying that the things you've pointed out aren't true, rather that there are variables that affect these "truths". The science you present misses how a particular electric guitar may respond with a particular amp/speaker at a certain volume and in a certain place...there are mechanics at play in that scenario that aren't accounted for by your explanation (which essentially only holds true for an "unaffected" natural string vibration). You're over-simplifying things a bit when it comes to amplified tone as opposed to natural (acoustic) tone. And of course, as you noted, "better" is completely subjective.