Thunderbird Posted June 11, 2020 Posted June 11, 2020 (edited) I'm just wondering if anybody knows why nearly all cheap bass strings have silk windings at the ends and also some quite expensive ones have windings too I always thought it was done on expensive strings to make them look better also does anybody else find strings with windings on a bit of a pain cos sometimes the windings don't like certain bridges or nuts etc Hope that all made sense lol Edited June 11, 2020 by Thunderbird Quote
Reggaebass Posted June 11, 2020 Posted June 11, 2020 I know certain brands use them for identification, and I think the silks help to grip the tuning peg and prevent them from slipping, also Iām pretty sure the silk isĀ wound into flats to prevent them from unwinding, Ā Ā Ā and on a few occasions Iāve had them go over the bridge saddle and Iāve had to trim them back a bit, Ā which is not good . š 1 Quote
Thunderbird Posted June 11, 2020 Author Posted June 11, 2020 31 minutes ago, Reggaebass said: I know certain brands use them for identification, and I think the silks help to grip the tuning peg and prevent them from slipping, also Iām pretty sure the silk isĀ wound into flats to prevent them from unwinding, Ā Ā Ā and on a few occasions Iāve had them go over the bridge saddle and Iāve had to trim them back a bit, Ā which is not good . š Thanks for the answerĀ I agree trimming the silks back is a nightmareĀ 1 Quote
Reggaebass Posted June 11, 2020 Posted June 11, 2020 4 minutes ago, Thunderbird said: I agree trimming the silks back is a nightmareĀ Yeah definitely thunderbird, I canāt remember which brand they were now but I didnāt buy them again, thereās a thread on here somewhere about silks, Iāll see if I can find it āļø Quote
Thunderbird Posted June 11, 2020 Author Posted June 11, 2020 4 minutes ago, Reggaebass said: Yeah definitely thunderbird, I canāt remember which brand they were now but I didnāt buy them again, thereās a thread on here somewhere about silks, Iāll see if I can find it āļø Thanks I did have a look for a thread but couldn't find it hence the new one lol š 1 Quote
WingedWords Posted June 11, 2020 Posted June 11, 2020 I remember asking my cello teacher about this. A long time ago, but as far as I can remember, she said string manufacturers use different silk windings to distinguish different gauges/tensions/materials etc and also that the winding at the peg end helps the string grip the peg and at the bridge end it helps damp down resonance between bridge and tailpiece. We were talking about strings for the violin family of course. On electric bass strings I suspect it's just to add anĀ appearance ofĀ class. 2 Quote
Si600 Posted June 11, 2020 Posted June 11, 2020 I had to cut the silk off of the b string on the flats I've just fitted, it wouldn't go through either the hole in the bridge or the hole in the body. All the others were fine. Quote
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