I just installed the EJ45FF last week. I think they are higher tension and they do seem to settle in a little quicker. I find that the action is now a little higher because of the slightly higher tension. I think I will make another saddle to get a slightly lower action and I will alternate between saddles depending on the strings I am using. I think I get the same crispness with the EJ49 (black nylon), but overall the sound is fuller.
I am a convert, they do settle quicker and I usually have minimal slight tuning adjustments starting and during a session and as you say a slightly brighter sound from the trebles. Thanks for confirming my perceptions.
I have that guitar and originally had EJ45s on it. I replaced them with LaBella 820s and the guitar came to life. Way more punchy and defined and the strings snap back in place quicker. Still easy to fret. The LaBella 820s are not expensive either.
It's just a random scale run on the E phrygian scale ( all natural notes) starting on the F 1st fret on first string. Don't go straight down the scale. Play a few notes and go back up a couple . Do this and finally end on E 2nd fret 4th string. This is the basic idea. You don't need to do it exactly the same. Hope it helps.
I have just fitted the same EJ45FF set and they seem very loud and bright. Hopefully they will mellow a little or like you, I'm going back to the EJ 45s. I dont quite get the " carbon " thing as they look pretty much like nylon to me...
I want to change the original strings on my guitar which came as high trebles, medium basses. I presume 'high' and 'medium' is referring to the tension. Would I need to mix tensions when changing the strings? I'm a beginner and my knowledge of strings is nil.
Personally, I have never mixed sets and have always just used complete sets of D'Adarrio medium or hard tension. I think medium tension EJ45s are a great all around set at a reasonable price.
@@duendedude2345 -- Thanks for the input. I suspect the original strings are a little less than good quality as a cost saving measure. The g string on my guitar sounds awful when I use a capo. There's no other word for it. I'm hoping a fresh set of better quality strings will improve the sound a bit. 🤞
I just installed the EJ45FF last week. I think they are higher tension and they do seem to settle in a little quicker. I find that the action is now a little higher because of the slightly higher tension. I think I will make another saddle to get a slightly lower action and I will alternate between saddles depending on the strings I am using. I think I get the same crispness with the EJ49 (black nylon), but overall the sound is fuller.
I am tempted.
I am a convert, they do settle quicker and I usually have minimal slight tuning adjustments starting and during a session and as you say a slightly brighter sound from the trebles. Thanks for confirming my perceptions.
@@rickandrew6397 Thanks for watching.
I have that guitar and originally had EJ45s on it. I replaced them with LaBella 820s and the guitar came to life. Way more punchy and defined and the strings snap back in place quicker. Still easy to fret. The LaBella 820s are not expensive either.
@@morrowcosom Thanks. I will try them. Stuck with D’addario for best value for money. But will definitely check out the LaBella.
I want to learn a part u played but i cant could u teach me pls it's from 2:50 to 2:55
It's just a random scale run on the E phrygian scale ( all natural notes) starting on the F 1st fret on first string. Don't go straight down the scale. Play a few notes and go back up a couple . Do this and finally end on E 2nd fret 4th string. This is the basic idea. You don't need to do it exactly the same. Hope it helps.
@@duendedude2345 I did it, Thank you so much
I have just fitted the same EJ45FF set and they seem very loud and bright. Hopefully they will mellow a little or like you, I'm going back to the EJ 45s. I dont quite get the " carbon " thing as they look pretty much like nylon to me...
Agreed. The trebles are a bit to harsh for me , especially at the times when I get a bit heavy handed.
I want to change the original strings on my guitar which came as high trebles, medium basses. I presume 'high' and 'medium' is referring to the tension.
Would I need to mix tensions when changing the strings? I'm a beginner and my knowledge of strings is nil.
Personally, I have never mixed sets and have always just used complete sets of D'Adarrio medium or hard tension. I think medium tension EJ45s are a great all around set at a reasonable price.
@@duendedude2345 -- Thanks for the input. I suspect the original strings are a little less than good quality as a cost saving measure. The g string on my guitar sounds awful when I use a capo. There's no other word for it. I'm hoping a fresh set of better quality strings will improve the sound a bit. 🤞
Я увидел что у вас 999 подписчиков. И решил стать 1000. thank you for the beautiful music
Thank you so much for listening , subscribing, and your kind words.