Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
The extra tension is great on the resonator as it’s primarily used for slide I’m open tunings - on the Dreadnought I tune down a full step and use a capo. I often use open tunings on that guitar as well - big strings tend down-tune well.
13-56 in standard tuning at concert pitch are bloody hard work....
For concert pitch I like 12-54 strings. A few companies make those string sets, eg Newtone.
Depending on the construction of your guitar it might not sound much better.
It should be fine to try it but personally I would stick with the 12s as they’re generally thick enough, for my tastes anyway.
What pick are you using? As a general rule thinner picks give less low end than thicker picks on acoustic, and the tone of the pick is a bigger factor on an acoustic guitar than an electric one. Cheap to try
If you’re a heavy strummer check you’re not strumming too hard. There’s a point on some acoustics where strumming any harder will choke the tone a little. Again a dread is usually constructed to be ok with a bit of a battering but it’s worth considering factors in how you play it because getting the best sound out an acoustic is IMO more strongly tied to the playing than an electric (because other factors come into play with the rest of the signal chain there).
Any suggestions for picks to suit acoustic or electric welcome.
I also like Dunlop nylons for picked lines, the .73 and .88 are decent all rounders. Though I’ll use even thicker if there’s no strumming as that can give a nice solid tone that’s not too bright.
Dreads are known to be good for strumming rhythm because they're big and loud - a set of 12's or 13's should do the trick.
Strumming is ONE of the techniques of the guitarist which needs to be learned and mastered for best use / effect.
Maybe ya'r gonna 'need a bigger guitar'
It’s cheap enough to try. You’re using EJ16s now....stick on a set of EJ17s and then you’ll know, and the difference will be a fair reflection of the change in gauge without the additional complication of a change in maker, composition etc.
It will be stiffer to play, but if you like the change in sound, then there is a lot that can be done with set up to restore playability. There are enough YouTube videos of little kids and arthritic old men flat out ripping on medium-strung dreads as evidence that mediums need not be prohibively tough.
My main guitars - a dread and an OM - both have mediums and play very easily. The key is in how they are set up. The OM sounds better with slightly lower tension mediums (DR Rare) so that might be another avenue to explore after your initial experiment.
If you want a real low tension (quality) string go for DR Rares - I use their 13-56. DR achieve the reduced tension by using a smaller diameter core wire - obviously this ONLY applys to the wound strings .
I use both Newt M/C's and DR Rares 13-56 but have 'well developed' hands / fingers which makes tension a moot issue, I just like the sound and feel of both.