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In summary, if the coating is a bit frayed I don’t worry about it any more.
and to get out of the house, call the fire brigade and think about getting the guitar repaired
personally don’t like them for finger picking, have pretty much settled on Martins after trying lots of makes and materials. Have some daddarios on at the moment to give them a last chance but I’ve found them dying quite quick, esp the thicker ones
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They suck.
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So I'm hoping the Elixir's won't sound like shit on the D28. Otherwise I'll feel like shit cos the guitar sounds like shit.
Ok I'll finish now.
Most Elixirs are bronze, which is an alloy of copper and tin. The particular bronze alloy normally used for strings has a very small amount of phosphorus added as well, hence the "phosphor bronze" term. Bronze strings never have as much brightness as new brass strings but keep what brightness they do have for quite a bit longer - around about twice as long as a rule of thumb. And coated bronze strings last longer still.
Different people get different results depending on what sort of sound they are looking for, on how much they play, on their skin chemistry, on how hard they play, and probably other things too. But as a rough guide, most people should get two or three weeks out of a set of uncoated 80/20s, fixe or six weeks out of uncoated phosphor bronze, and five or six months out of Monel or coated phosphor bronze.
If you love the sound of Martin 80/20 brass but wish they lasted longer, you could try Elixir Nanowen 80/20s, which don't have quite the same treble zing but aren't bad and last for several months (not as long as coated phosphor bronze though), or else Darco 80/20s, which are exactly the same string out of the same factory with the same great sound, but in a plain package at a significantly lower price.
(Checking a few UK string suppliers just now so that I could provide a link, they are hard to find. Stringsdirect.co.au usually has them, if I remember correctly. I imagine it's just another Covid out-of-stock from the US - Martin guitars are on 6-months backorder! My go-to US retailer, Strings by Mail doesn't have them, but here - https://www.stringsandbeyond.com/darco-80-20-bronze-acoustic-guitar-strings.html is one which does. Strings and Beyond charged me double what SBM charge me for postage to Australia (and more than Strings Direct in the UK charge too) but they may be more reasonable sending to the UK. And yes, they really are the same excellent strings you get in the Martin-branded packet.)
I used to use D'addario phosphor bronze but I ended up restringing every 3 weeks cos they were so dull after that period. I may try the Elixir 80/20, or the Martin SP Authentic Phosphor Bronze. I may like them more and get more life out them who knows.
The fraying doesn't affect how Elixirs sound. I get over a year with each set.
Elixirs sound top heavy / tinny for the first few hours - then they do settle in, that tinny top end subsides...
...then they sound the same for about a year afterwards (to my ears they sound rather nice). I don't believe that the differences between various strings are as pronounced as many people will have you believe. Though round cores may sound different, no personal experience there...
If you have one or two acoustic guitars - then yes IMO a few weeks' life from a set of strings is fine. If you have a few more guitars, then the longevity of Elixirs is a real practical blessing.
I'm a big fan of horses for courses: I have five guitars at present. One always gets Elixir phosphor bronze ('coz they sound great on that one), one always gets uncoated John Pierce 80/20 brass light baritone (for the same reason), I've just about settled on uncoated Darco or SIT 80/20s as the best fit for the cedar dreadnought. The Angel I'm still trying different things with, and I've pretty much decided to sell the 12-string and buy another 6-string instead.
Point is, different guitar, different strings. You just have to try stuff until you find the one you like. And if your tastes change, change your strings.