RayL wrote:Hi Jim
If 13 - 56 is 'Medium' , what would be 'Heavy Guage' ? Would you actually use, say, 16 - 60 on a standard guitar or would Heavy Guage be classed as strings used for Baritone guitars (C- C, A - A, etc)?
Ray
Hi, Ray,
Heavy gauge strings are certainly known, but are not often seen these days. Freddie Green (rhythm guitarist with the Count Basie Orchestra) was renowned for using a set which measured about 14-60
http://www.freddiegreen.org/instruments/setup.html. As it happens, I have a set of 14-56 on my Gibson ES175 (ex-Brian Dandridge).
There are players who use a 16 thou string (or even an 18) for high E (with 60 thou or more for the bottom E).
http://www.professorstring.com/archives/thick_gauge_strings_partI.phpSets like 11-50 (
classic light gauge strings,
always sold as such until the 1970s) can only be considered medium gauge if that term is so qualified as to make it effectively meaningless (eg, "medium in terms of what a typical shop might stock"). Heck, 11-50 is probably
heavy if your terms of reference are what you might find at a typical pub rock jam session... Context is everything, and I prefer to use a wide context.
"Heavy" also has to be judged in terms of the tuning. 13-56 would be exceptionally light on a baritone guitar, but for EADGBE on typical guitar scale, it's medium. The same string can be light, medium or heavy depending on what it's being used for!
JN
PS: The craziness of some "modern" thinking on guitar string gauges is well illustrated by this eBay offering of "heavy gauge strings" sized: 010, 013, 017, 030, 042, 052 (!).
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/REGULAR-HEAVY-GAUGE-electric-guitar-strings-10-52-/300277894796Perhaps the company selling them is well-named.