According to this, the less times around the better.
http://www.kinman.com/html/toneWorks...#stayingInTune
I am clueless since I have yet to replace a string!
What are your opinions for the number of wraps around the post for tuning stability?
I pick a moon dog.
According to this, the less times around the better.
http://www.kinman.com/html/toneWorks...#stayingInTune
I am clueless since I have yet to replace a string!
"Without music to decorate it, time is just a bunch of boring production deadlines or dates by which bills must be paid." - Frank Zappa
Yamaha G240
Epi Dot Deluxe, Squier '51, G&L S-500
Vox AD30VT, PODxt
Once is enough for me. On unwound strings, I wrap the end of the string back around the post and hook it around itself before I start tuning it up to pitch.
Thanks for the link Hog. Nice.
Ro3b, when I first replaced my strings, I wound those suckers around and around and around. The next time, I just went around a time or two.
There have been so many different variables, type of string, gauge etc that I wasn't able to get a good fix on which was better. What if it only goes halfway around?
Last edited by tot_Ou_tard; January 5th, 2007 at 05:39 PM.
I pick a moon dog.
I definitely think that the fewer winds the more stable the tuning.
On a guitar that you expect to be taking off the pickguard for whatever reasons (ie. Strats etc.) winding only once on the post will usually result in broken strings if you need to loosen them a little to get the pickguard off and then retuning them back to pitch. This usually will occur on the high B and E strings. Normal people don't usually have to worry about this. Unusual people that change pickguards out or pickups out constantly do. Just sayin'......
Guitars/Bass - MIM Fender Classic 50s Strat, MIM Fender Standard Strat, Squier Classic Vibe 50s Tele, Gibson Les Paul Studio, Epi '56 Gold Top Les Paul, Martin DSR acoustic, Sigma Martin Auditorium electric/acoustic, Squier Jazz Bass.
Amps/Cabinets/Modelers - Model 2558 50 watt Marshall Silver Anniversary Jubilee combo w/ Celestion Vintage 30s, 4x12 Marshall cabinet w/25 watt Greenback Celestions, Fender Blues Junior w/ a couple of Billm mods, Line 6 POD 2.0, Roland Micro Cube
Pedals/Effects - Cry Baby Classic Wah, Boss TU-2, Boss NS-2, Boss RC-2 Loop Station, Ross Compressor, MXR Micro Amp, Danelectro FAB Echo, Danelectro FAB Chorus, Danelectro Chicken Salad, Marshall Guv'nor Plus, Marshall Echohead, Duhvoodooman's Zonkin' Yellow Screamer, Digitech Digiverb, Digitech Bad Monkey, Dunlop Fuzz Face, Homemade Loop Bypass pedal, Duhvoodooman's Sonic Tonic (Maxon SD-9 clone +), Voodoo Labs Superfuzz
2-4 times on unwound and 2-3 times on wound
Ron Paul is like Kryptonite to Tyranny
Guitars:
MIM Fender Stratocaster, Ibanez AS73, Fender F210, Martin Backpaker Steel-String
Amps:
Behringer V-Tone 2x10 60W, Marshall G10 MkII, Danelectro E-Studio Honeytone.
Pedals:
Danelectro Corned Beef reverb, Johnson flanger, DOD FX25 envelope filter, Behringer Hellbabe wah, Digitech Bad Monkey
I dont normally pay much attention to how many times my strings are wound around...BUT when I install the low e string, I cut it off at the 3rd machine head, then thread it through the e tuner, I pass the string over one time and then under thereafter...Ive heard this refered to as "the knot", but Im just recently picking up on this technique, been doing it for a couple of months now, and I dont have all the string issues I used to...and I wouldnt say I have tuning issues either.
I usually go 2, maybe 3 if I didn't measure well. I haven't had any tuning issues, but that is more likely due to my blocked trem than the string winds.
Blues Breaker