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#1
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Hi there,
I bought a used classical guitar in good shape a few years ago. I keep it in a moisture controlled room. The existing strings seem to be old but they were kept in tune so I never thought the tuning could be so tricky. I had a set of Savarez Long Play Normal tension that I bought about 3 decades ago and were kept sealed in the original packaging (never opened) in room temperature so I thought age hopefully is not an issue. I put the strings to the guitar with typical considerations for nylon strings. They sound very nice! I knew I would have to keep tuning the guitar quite frequently in the beginning but now it is more than two weeks passed and still I have to tune the high E, B, and even some of the other ones to some extent. Is this normal to take that long? The off tune is about half note or so (e.g. Eb instead of E). Would age make a difference in how long it takes to settle the tuning? Thank you for your advice! |
#2
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I'm not sure about using 30 year old strings, but humidity plays a big role. I have to tweak the tuning of my nylons everyday.
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Barry Avalon Ard Ri L2-320C, Martin D-16GT, McIlroy A20, Pellerin SJ CW Cordoba C12, C5, and Fusion 12 YouTube Celtic playlist YouTube nylon playlist |
#3
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When I was gigging regularly in the summer months, playing weddings etc outdoors in direct sunlight, I would be retuning after every tune!
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Jon "The way nature seems to work is that it sends a messenger...the acoustic guitar needed to go in another direction, Michael Hedges became that messenger" Tommy Emmanuel |
#4
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It took almost a month of daily tuning to finally settle in on my classical. These were brand new strings.
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#5
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I love Cordoba guitars and have several in 3/4, 7/8 and full size. Yet I never can stand the Savarez strings that come on them- they aren't the top of the line either, but I find them soft and wimpy, I usually try to get some life out of them, and they wind them so nicely at the factory. But I love to put the D'addario Pro Artes on them, because the guitar both sounds and feels sooo much better with better strings.. I wish Cordoba would at least put the upper end Savarez on if they otherwise have some marketing agreement. The cheap Savarez strings don't do the guitars justice.
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#6
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#7
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Agree, I do the same…especially over the first month to six weeks…but after that daily tweaking still necessary…at least with a range of strings I’ve used…some expensive …
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Jeff Mark Hatcher Pina Parlor Torrified Maple/Cedar Stephen Kinnaird 00 B&W Ebony/Engelmann Spruce Simon Fay African Blackwood/Sinker Redwood Wolfgang Jellinghaus Torres Modelo 43S Maple/Spruce K Yairi CYTM Maple/Cedar |
#8
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In my experience I've found that the day I take a guitar out of the case after it's been sitting overnight, and it's still in tune, it's time to change the strings. It seems when they reach the point where they're no longer stretching much, the intonation starts getting a little flakey and you start losing those nice ringing overtones that the Cantiga Alliance strings are noted for. On many string sets I often wear through the windings on the bass strings before the set has completely stretched out. That said, I've noticed that the windings on the Cantiga Alliance Premium basses don't wear through as quickly as other strings I've used. Regarding string age factor, I can only imagine that strings do, in fact, have a shelf life. I would guess, like many synthetic products, certain chemicals eventually dry out. I've never put my theory to the test, however. |
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Tags |
nylon string, old strings, savarez, strings, tuning |
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