I’ve been spending the summer learning how to play the guitar. Last month, I bought a lovely Sire S7 and I’ve been having a blast playing it and learning guitar chords and playing with the modes on the couple of portable guitar amps I bought (The Fender Magnum Micro and a Positive Grid Spark Go). I know those amps might not sound that impressive, but like I said I’m still pretty new at this and when I get better, I’ll probably get an even bigger amp.

But that’s not why I’m here today.

I was on the Ernie Ball website thinking about picking up some spare strings (because I broke my little e string a few weeks ago), when I noticed they had different pack of string sets with different strings that were other than the typical 10-13-17-26-36-46 set, but had other gauges of strings.

Surely, the width of the strings would result in different notes as much as where you put your fingers on the fretboard, right?

So what would I be gaining or losing if I used a different set up strings? (I’m not planning on re-stringing my guitar any time soon, but it would be nice to know the significance of these other sets, what they are used for, and if there was a specific set ideal for playing certain genres or playing techniques.)

1 point

String bending is easier with light strings. I have a friend who plays jazz with 13/1000” e string. It’s almost like a piano. No bending or vibrato.

I usually use 10/1000” es and can’t easily bend up a semitone and a half but it’s fine with 9/1000”.

So the kind of music you want you play is a determinant

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2 points
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9-42 is typically for fender scale.

The width of the string has changes to the intonation, but that is is fractions cents off going from 9s to 10s. It is more about player preference and getti g a string to not flow arounf with how hard you want to pick and how it feels. In e standard on a 25.5 scale you could go all the way down to 7s or up to 13s.

I really like 9 or 9.5 to 46 on fender scale

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2 points

@RageAgainstTheSurge
Other posters already covered it but yeah, in standard tuning string thickness might give you a very slight, barely detectable difference if any at all. Thicker strings only matter when you’re playing in alternate tunings, and even then you have to tune quite aways down before regular strings hit their limit and become too floppy to use.

Outside of that? Strings aren’t meant to last forever! Try several different types and find what you like!

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7 points

Play whatever is most comfortable.

Rick Beato did a detailed breakdown and tests on string weights…turns out breaking your hands to play .13s doesn’t get you any sound advantage.

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8 points

It makes way less difference to the sound than most people think. In a blind test with different string gauges, I think few people would be able to tell which is which.

Also be aware that changing string gauge also changes the tension. You will need to readjust intonation, spring tension (unless you have a fixed bridge), and possibly truss rod.

For a beginner, I would highly recommend sticking with the standard 10-46. Aside from the adjustments needed, heavier strings are also a bit harder to play. Even as an experience player, I find zero benefit of heavier gauges.

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0 points

Beato put out a video on string sizes a few years ago, and there were some tonal differences. Not real major, and probably more to do with the how the players react to the feel of the strings.

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2 points

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