
Outlaws
New member
Here is my contribution to making this thread longer than it ever needed to be -
I don't own a bass so I can't help anyone.
I don't own a bass so I can't help anyone.
Rokket said:I never boil my strings either, what's your take on that?
That's just too funny!!!!Garry Sharp said:I tried that boiling the strings thing once. Couldn't quite figure it out - the only receptable large enough was the bath, took 18 kettles to fill it. Got water in the pick ups and everything. Buying new strings is cheaper...
I'd heard that too, and was going to try it, but I am just not wanting to go through all that trying to wind them on after they've already been crimped. I'll probably just wait until one of them dies and I've got $30.00 that needs a purpose..ez_willis said:It works but the strings go dead pretty quickly after that. I read somewhere on this forum, can't remember who posted it but it seemed like a good idea, haven't tried it yet either so I can't vouch for it. They suggested getting a piece of pvc pipe, 3/4" or 1", get 2 caps, glue one on one end, put your strings in it then fill it with alcohol and cap that end without glueing it and let 'em soak for 24 hours.
By the way, that's isopropyl alcohol, not whiskey.
Oh, then put 'em back on your bass and TUNE IT!![]()
I've heard that a lot of bass players don't change their strings until one breaks (how often does that happenlpdeluxe said:4. There is no 4. I just don't change strings.
May have to give them a try. I've been a D'Addario man for the better part of 20 years.... I guess change is always good!lpdeluxe said:That's why I like ground round wounds (currently, GHS Brite Flats): they sound like round wounds that have been broken in.
Humidity and other atmospheric elements play a part in that too. I have to tune all my guitars before I record, because Japan is so damn humid all the time. I don't have a dehumidifier in the house, so...Unsprung said:I could probably do with a better set of tunning pegs on my Johnson acoustic/electric bass. Last year when I played it more regularly than currently, it seemed like I was tuning it every time I went to play it. It only went unplayed maybe a day or two, but it went out of tune nonetheless. The only time my other bass and guitars go out of tune is when they sit for weeks unplayed, but that's probably also a symptom of their strings being "older than dirt," as I'd mentioned in a previous addition to this thread.
Matt
lpdeluxe said:That's why I like ground round wounds (currently, GHS Brite Flats): they sound like round wounds that have been broken in.
Price is the main reason I am so glad they last longer than guitar strings. Even buying them in bulk (lpdeluxe said:I only bought the Brite Flats because, after 20-some years, apparently D'Addario no longer made the Ground Wound Rounds. Four and a half years ago I bought my Carvin LB20, which came with round wounds, and I really missed the GWR sound. The closest I could come to the D'Addarios was the GHS Brite Flats. THEN it was a matter of finding them cheaply enough (list price in the US for these is $41) for a parsimonious, and nearly in tune, bass player to buy.
LOL, play it loud enough with the eq cranked and who will notice?lpdeluxe said:...hey, I'm a bass player! How do I know whether they are in tune or not?