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Joined: November 2004 Posts: 4413
| ...is a PITA, especially when tuning up you pick the A natural string and turn the A octave button.
It goes twaaaaaaaaaaaaang.
And the strings are Thomastik and they use flatwound bronze for the octaves, roundwounds for the naturals. I've just emailed Austria begging for help.
Whatever the strings were that the factory put on the Ute12 didn't last very long. They sounded great when it arrived but deadened up in a couple of weeks.
Now I'm going back to playing my 11 string guitar. |
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Joined: October 2005 Posts: 5330
Location: Cicero, NY | Picturing that 11 string in your hands and I'm having a hard time crying for you, man... |
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Joined: March 2005 Posts: 12759
Location: Boise, Idaho | Send it over and I'll do it for you. I'm sure there will be other volunteers, too. |
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Joined: March 2002 Posts: 14842
Location: NJ | The USA'll bail you out . . . . . a-gain . . . |
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Joined: January 2005 Posts: 4903
Location: Phoenix AZ | ... but this time we're bringing our own food. |
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Joined: December 2004 Posts: 4394
Location: East Tennessee | Originally posted by Tupperware:
... but this time we're bringing our own food. And Beer,(Ice Cold). :D |
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Joined: January 2002 Posts: 14127
Location: 6 String Ranch | Flat wound octaves and round regulars. Now that sounds interesting.
Changing strings on any 12 string is a pain it the @ss. |
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Joined: November 2004 Posts: 4413
| Thomastik are a law unto themselves - they make some truly weird and wonderful strings. I use them on my ute and on my Country Artist - both variations on the John Pearse low mass, low tension sets. The steels are chrome polished flatwound over nylon and the nylons are an all wound set. The steels are 10-38 and the nylons 16-39 (sixteen to thirty-nine).
Over here they are very expensive but they last forever and I don't play anything else anymore. The eleven strings on the ute12 sound spectacular - they are 10-41. |
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