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luke69

Well-known member
Joined
May 9, 2005
Messages
149
Location
france
Luke69,

It's not your poor English it's our poor French!! :):)

oh ! TNT
your poor french.......it's possible but music is universal no !!!!!!!
what does you mean ?

if you don't understand i appreciate you tell me
it's very interisting for me
i would like to much better communicate with all of us

thank's bye bye
 

luke69

Well-known member
Joined
May 9, 2005
Messages
149
Location
france
Lucious thank's for the comments

it's a great honnor for us to read you each time

if i play EBMM it's your fault

and i say thank you MISTER:):):)
 

marsguitars

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 9, 2007
Messages
114
Location
UK
Nuttin wrong with 9's! OK, if you're playing punk/thrash you might struggle, but for regular pop/rock type stuff 9's are the most popular with most lead players.
 

TonyEVH5150

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2006
Messages
1,558
Location
Nashville, TN
Once I found the hybrid slinky 9's I never looked back............


+1. These are a perfect mix. The wound strings from a set of 10's, combined with the steel strings from a set of 9's. I can tune down (Eb or drop D) and still have zero trouble bending.
 

petruccirocks02

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 22, 2006
Messages
1,923
Location
Levittown, PA
It seems whenever I go to the store to buy strings, the sales guys always try to convince me to get 10s or 11s rather than 9s. Is it just a personal preference or is there really something there? I have been playing Super Slinkys pretty much the whole time (over 20 years). I don't know if I want to get used to changing to a thicker guage at this point. Old dog and new tricks.

I do sometimes have issues with string breakages, but I don't think a slightly thicker guage would make that big of a difference.

If the guitar was previously strung with 9s does one need to make adjustments to the truss rod or action if one decides to go with 10s? Or is the difference pretty negligible? I mean we are only talking .001".

Personally, I love 9's, but my new favorite strings are Hybrid Slinky's. I get the low end chunk of 10's with the high end sparkle of 9's. Best of both worlds. Pete recently hooked me up with some RPS Slinky's which I'm gonna try next. I wonder how they'll compare to the Hybrid's. Thanks for the strings by the way Pete!

-Phil
 

SteveB

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 3, 2004
Messages
6,192
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
I use Super Slinky (9's) exclusively on electric guitars. Everything else just feels wrong.

I did try some regular Slinky (10's) on my JP after I first bought it.. not bad, but I felt like the tension was a little high for my liking.. I had to play a lot harder to keep my fingers from slipping off the strings when making bends.

So I changed it over to my beloved Super Slinky (9's) and the world was right again.
 

Karlsson-75

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 1, 2006
Messages
115
Location
Finland
I have always used Super Slinkys (9's). They really sound good to my ear and the feel under fingers is excellent. Can't work with anything else.
 

Petersonic

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
81
See, the thing is 9s ARE a little gay... Nah, just kidding. But I'm partial to 11s, so I'll just keep saying that they're not what real men play, ok? Makes me feel more macho to say so. Like Rambo or something...
Serious now, as a lot of people said, it comes down to personal taste... I like to 'wrestle' with the strings a little (Richie Kotzen does too), some people don't. Also, there's a bit of an image thing. 11s associate to a certain kind of playing, to some extent; 8s or 9s, for example, to another, and so on...
 

robertmoore

New member
Joined
Jan 11, 2008
Messages
2
Location
wallasey
it could be that the good guys at ernie ball are giving you this advice because they know that their lighter guage strings are substandard, i play ernie ball 8s and my last 3 packs havent even made it to standard tuning before snapping on me. 2 weeks ago id have recommended EB to anyone, but im pounds down and not the only person who has noticed this...
 

Norrin Radd

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2004
Messages
2,914
Location
Saint Paul
I played 9s for about 20 years. Then I tried a whole bunch of different gauges on lots of different guitars through a 2 year process. I came to like a 10-52 set the best (that's EB's ST/HB set). I really dig the 10s on top and thicker ones on the bottom. I think for me it's because my technique is very clod like - too heavy and imprecise and inconsistent. The 10-52s fight me (and my bad tendencies!) enough that the guitar stays in tune despite my poor technique. And I really dig the clean tones a lot better with these than with 9s or 10s. Just my two cents.
 

KennethB

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 9, 2006
Messages
929
Location
Stavanger, Norway
Regular 10-46 gauge strings are for me personally the gold standard when it comes to electric guitar strings in standard tuning. Feels and sounds great to me.
If there's a different tuning involved I get strings to approx. match the tension of a 10-46 set in standard tuning.
 

candid_x

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 26, 2006
Messages
3,272
After using Slinky 9's forever, I've been trying different strings. Currently I'm using a 9.5 pure nickel (called 9+) from a small boo-teek maker, on my maple board silo, but have come back to Hybrid Slinky on my rosewood board silo, for the greater power/crunch factor. I'll still throw on a set of Slinky 9's once in awhile, too. Even though they feel a bit rubber-bandish, they have a perfectly balanced feel and chimey sound across all strings. Just requires a lighter touch.

I know there's a general consensus that heavier strings sound better, and that the only thing 9's have going for it is that they're easier (for some) to play, but I think Slinky 9's have a distinct vibe that the others lack.
 

Eilif

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 9, 2004
Messages
1,131
Location
Mililani, Hawaii
Here's how I look at it: Luke, EVH*, and JP use Super Slinkys, and anyone who thinks they are wusses is just cuckoo. If 9s are good enough for them, they're certainly good enough for me!


* I'm making an assumption in the case of EVH. Since the Axis comes with 9s, I assume the EVH guitar did also, and if this was so, it would have been because EVH wanted it that way. Whether EVH uses 9s now is not relevant as he at least used to back in the day. Somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
 
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