I recently discovered the Skinny Top Heavy Bottom set and it rules. Been playing it on a Prestige Ibanez with no issues. However, I recently bought a new guitar (LTD MH-1000ET) and am having an issue. After installing the strings (I filed the nut slots for proper fit) and tuning to Drop D, the low E string is just too floppy.
This particular LTD has the new Evertune bridge (amazing btw) and the saddles actually move forward and backward to maintain constant tension on the string. Normally, a .52 low E string should be fine for drop D, but it's just not cutting it with my new guitar and I'm thinking it has to do with the saddles of the evertune bridge not providing as firm of an anchor on the string as say, a hardtail or even a tremolo bridge. I am a notoriously heavy picker/strummer and this is one of the reason's I went with evertune.
In conclusion, I'm thinking about keeping the STHB but swapping the .52 with, say, a .56 to help with Drop D. My concerns are: is a .56 just too much tension for standard E tuning? Is it weird to have a heavy gauge low E string and then the rest fairly normal gauge? I'm not sure if this "imbalance" could put lopsided stress on one side of the neck. I could always go with the Beefy Slinky and swap the .54 for a .56, but that's gonna require more nut filing and I really enjoy the skinny top of the STHB. Thanks for any help on this one!
-Mitch
This particular LTD has the new Evertune bridge (amazing btw) and the saddles actually move forward and backward to maintain constant tension on the string. Normally, a .52 low E string should be fine for drop D, but it's just not cutting it with my new guitar and I'm thinking it has to do with the saddles of the evertune bridge not providing as firm of an anchor on the string as say, a hardtail or even a tremolo bridge. I am a notoriously heavy picker/strummer and this is one of the reason's I went with evertune.
In conclusion, I'm thinking about keeping the STHB but swapping the .52 with, say, a .56 to help with Drop D. My concerns are: is a .56 just too much tension for standard E tuning? Is it weird to have a heavy gauge low E string and then the rest fairly normal gauge? I'm not sure if this "imbalance" could put lopsided stress on one side of the neck. I could always go with the Beefy Slinky and swap the .54 for a .56, but that's gonna require more nut filing and I really enjoy the skinny top of the STHB. Thanks for any help on this one!
-Mitch