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I certainly can hear stiffer picks sound more like the sound of their material,particularly plastic.
(Note that, in English usage, it can be a bit keen to use the Latin plural of nouns which have successfully leapt from Latin into English. Hence you could say forums, maximums, ultimatums etc. Not fora, maxima or ultimata. I suspect that the correct English for the plural of plectrum is therefore plectrums).
Or plectra. You choose.
What re really need here is a Stratocaster playing Latin professor! :-)
I think you're probably okay unless you start mixing Latin and English plurals, eg "I have enough plectra to fill several stadiums"
My favourite pick is a Dunlop Tortex red, point 50mm. Recently I bought a pack of 12. Even though they are the same make and same thickness, they don't all give the same sound
Someone got me some hobgoblin (the beer) ones which were about 1mm and decent, but I had to dribble bostick runs over them to grip!
Then I found the 0.50 Herco nylon ones which have a patterned top which I can keep hold of.
Fred Kelly makes identical thumb picks in either 'poly' or 'delrin' - the delrin ones sound warmer.
Your point about shape is also valid @guitarjack66 .
FK speed picks (delrin) have a narrow toungue (so more flex) and sound different to his regular shaped ones in the same material.
Gawd this is getting nerdy. Sorry mate!
Maxima - yes.
Ultimata - a bridge too far.
As for plectrums (um, should I be saying "plectra", not sure about that one) when I used to use them I liked thinish, medium flexible ones with very rounded elliptical tips. I had a box of 100 or so, which lasted me for decades. Now I can't find them. (Not that I need to anymore, I'm fingers-only these days.)
With the rounded tip (and to some extent even with a sharp tip) you could vary the strength of the pluck by rotating your wrist a little so as to angle the plectrum at (say) 15 degrees to the string. That gives a much harder pluck because it is less prone to bend.
Failing those (after I wore them all out / broke them / lost them) the old Jim Dunlop .73 would always do at a pinch.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
I don't use it but you may find it makes the surface less "slippery"
Thanks for the tip, but the plec isn't that heavy.....
Other than that, I like the pointy tip - I always disliked worn-out picks. Finally, and I think this is a big part of it, the Jazz picks are great to hold with the textured surface. There's something reassuring about them, I think that feel is important.
Anyway it's a rabbit-hole alright. I've been playing for decades now and only switched to these a few years back. Pretty much used Tortex up to that point.
1. Holding the pick more LOOSELY helps. Counterintuitive but its true.
2. Logos aren't helpful for grip. (Also counterintuitive) IME, a smoother pick surface increases the surface are for the thumb to grip. So if you have a pick where the logo can be rubbed off...rub it off. Or else, try holding the pick upside down (logo facing the floor) to maximise the top surface where the thumb rests
3. Saliva - lick your finger & dab it against your thumb...hey presto magic grip
3) - I've never tried, to be honest. If it works...
It's all a personal thing really. Whatever does the trick.
The choice of polymer or composite or laminate determines the pressure-temp range for moulding and whilst the thickness of material is directly related to stiffness, (deflection) the rate of cooling (quenching) and proximity to Tg (glass transition temperature) determine its properties for end use.
Needless to say this is complex ... even for a simple device such as a plectrum. It is actually micro-engineering.
The combination of a human (with all of their individual traits and preferences) makes the overall system and the sound it produces a unique event or unique pairing.
Long may it continue.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
being quite "stiff" I'd imagine they're not too giving/flexible on the thumb "fit"
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.