12 String Double Neck High 'G' Recommendation:

Inspector #20

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Hey, Gents...

On my new Von Herndon Doublneck, the G string tonal duties are handled by a plain .017" (low) and a .008" high octave.

I broke the .008" pulling it up an octave higher, so I swapped on a .009" which worked out ok. However, it was pretty spooky pulling it up to pitch.

Any suggestions on a better/more durable string for the 'G' position???

Thanks!!!

IMG_20171227_28253.jpg
 
Hey, Gents...

On my new Von Herndon Doublneck, the G string tonal duties are handled by a plain .017" (low) and a .008" high octave.

I broke the .008" pulling it up an octave higher, so I swapped on a .009" which worked out ok. However, it was pretty spooky pulling it up to pitch.

Any suggestions on a better/more durable string for the 'G' position???

Thanks!!!

View attachment 10203
Yes!
On my dulcimers, I take a .008 and wind that sucker up a whole step past high G to ultra super mega high A.
In the past I've had to solder the wrap at the ball end to keep it from unravelling under tension.
Some would make it for a while, others would pop on the way up. It was an annoying crap shoot.
I've tried .009's, .008's and even .007's, Nothing lasted more than a tuning or two.
My best luck seemed to be with super cheap Squier bulk .008's with the winds soldered.
At less than $3.00 a dozen at least I could afford to break a few strings now.

I finally stumbled upon D'Addario NYXL .008's just for the problem string. Bingo!
Ordered some singles from Just Strings.
The downside to these is a single now costs what a dozen of the cheap strings cost.

But they can take the tension and last for weeks or even longer.
I now include the D'Addario NYXL .008 on every dulcimer that I make or service, and use that string in my custom gauged string sets
for any high tension application, including my own 12 string.
 
Yes!
On my dulcimers, I take a .008 and wind that sucker up a whole step past high G to ultra super mega high A.
In the past I've had to solder the wrap at the ball end to keep it from unravelling under tension.
Some would make it for a while, others would pop on the way up. It was an annoying crap shoot.
I've tried .009's, .008's and even .007's, Nothing lasted more than a tuning or two.
My best luck seemed to be with super cheap Squier bulk .008's with the winds soldered.
At less than $3.00 a dozen at least I could afford to break a few strings now.

I finally stumbled upon D'Addario NYXL .008's just for the problem string. Bingo!
Ordered some singles from Just Strings.
The downside to these is a single now costs what a dozen of the cheap strings cost.

But they can take the tension and last for weeks or even longer.
I now include the D'Addario NYXL .008 on every dulcimer that I make or service, and use that string in my custom gauged string sets
for any high tension application, including my own 12 string.


Wow! Thanks!!!!
 
Hmmmm....I was thinking just the opposite!!!!

A .009" is under more tension (I think) acting as a 'G' string than it is as a high 'G' string...No????
Not sure how that tension scale goes, but I've had better luck with the .008's than anything else.
But this is also tuned up a full step from where you're going to be.
 
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