Jump to content
Gibson Brands Forums

Have a J45 and a Hummingbird.....try PB strings?


EddieNYC

Recommended Posts

I’ve had both guitars for a couple of years and have only restrung with the stock masterbuilt 80/20 Gibson’s. I’ve debated though about trying PB but have heard mixed reviews with some saying to dark with these mahogany dreads. Any thoughts? Also if i did try the PB I was thinking about the Daddario uncoated and possibly the elixir nanowire Coated. Not sure if the Coated strings takes away from the sound at all as a trade off for maybe lasting longer. I know Gibson has a PB as well.

 

Thanks!

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can’t listen to what’s written

One mans dark is another mans warm

On mans bright is another mans shimmery

 

There is a difference between Pb and 80/20’s but it’s not an ocean of difference

I’ve had both and the j45 sounds great regardless

 

Elixirs are great strings for mine , in my opinion , if only they weren’t so expensive

 

And people don’t start the ‘saves money in the long run’ story

Of course it does , but not everyone has the money to spare initially

I’d save money on my heating at home if I had a few million and bought a lot of barrels

 

But if you have the shackles in your pocket then grab a set of elixirs

 

Try everything you are able to basically !!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To me PB's are the way to go on both guitars, 80/20's are just too bright. A good middle grouns are DR Sunbems, PB's but with a 'sunny' tone, warm yet not dark. Give it a go.

 

With Elixirs I found they only sound good on maple guitars, on my SJ and Hummingbird they sucked a lot of the tone out. But as the Blind one said, its highly, highly personal. Best to spend some dough and experiment.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To me PB's are the way to go on both guitars, 80/20's are just too bright. A good middle grouns are DR Sunbems, PB's but with a 'sunny' tone, warm yet not dark. Give it a go.

 

 

EA's response saves me a lot of typing. All my 'hog flat tops have DR Sunbeams on them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To me PB's are the way to go on both guitars, 80/20's are just too bright. A good middle grouns are DR Sunbems, PB's but with a 'sunny' tone, warm yet not dark. Give it a go.

 

With Elixirs I found they only sound good on maple guitars, on my SJ and Hummingbird they sucked a lot of the tone out. But as the Blind one said, its highly, highly personal. Best to spend some dough and experiment.

I have Elixir coated PB's on my maple J-185. love them. thinking of putting them on my J45. just not sure because of how much they cost.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Only one way to find out, and it's a pretty cheap and easy experiment.

 

I personally would never buy strings off of eBay. Strings cost a couple bucks. Even coated strings aren't worth buying off of eBay. You'll save maybe a couple dollars, and as others have mentioned, you have no idea of their authenticity. I personally just use D-Addario EJ's. I use 80/20's on my Gibsons (EJ11's on the J45, EJ12's on the AJ) and PB's on my Martins (EJ17's on the D-28 and D-35, EJ16's on the 00-18).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nor me

 

Unless it’s some guitar shops eBay store

9 out of 10 are fake strings. Especially elixirs

I’ve had no problems with that! I’ve heard the rumors,, & I’m sure it does happen, but doubt seriously if it’s the norm! There’s fake guitars too, but I’ve never bought one!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I say PB and 80/20 are pretty similar, I've been playing 80/20s but this thread has me thinking I should try the PBs again, hmmm....

 

Anyways, not to derail your process, for a totally different sound (and look) you should try the martin retros. folks either love them or hate them. I'm in the ladder category, but think you've got to try them. A few of the folks on this forum rock them well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I say PB and 80/20 are pretty similar, I've been playing 80/20s but this thread has me thinking I should try the PBs again, hmmm....

 

Anyways, not to derail your process, for a totally different sound (and look) you should try the martin retros. folks either love them or hate them. I'm in the ladder category, but think you've got to try them. A few of the folks on this forum rock them well.

 

I'm going to have to respectfully disagree with you here about 80/20's and PB's being similar. I really don't think they sound anything alike. Obviously they are going to sound different on each guitar, and we all probably hear things differently to some extent.

 

PB's on my J45 sound a little muddy and cluttered, full bass, but sounds muddy and not very defined. 80/20's on the same guitar have much better clarity, articulation and note separation. The bass is still big and growly, but it's more defined with 80/20's. I've also experienced this same difference on my Advanced Jumbo, where it seems like 80/20's were made for that guitar.

 

Consequently, 80/20's sound dull and lifeless on my Martin guitars, both rosewood and mahogany and PB's give a lusher, fuller sound, while 80/20's sound dull and choked on the martins.

 

The only guitars I've ever liked Retros were on an all-mahogany Martin 000-15 and a Waterloo WL-14XTR. I've tried them on every other guitar mentioned above as well, they just seemed to suck some of the life out of the sound on other guitars. Less bass, duller and overall loss of volume,e as well (which is a bad thing if it's the sound you're after).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Only one way to find out, and it's a pretty cheap and easy experiment.

 

I personally would never buy strings off of eBay. Strings cost a couple bucks. Even coated strings aren't worth buying off of eBay. You'll save maybe a couple dollars, and as others have mentioned, you have no idea of their authenticity. I personally just use D-Addario EJ's. I use 80/20's on my Gibsons (EJ11's on the J45, EJ12's on the AJ) and PB's on my Martins (EJ17's on the D-28 and D-35, EJ16's on the 00-18).

 

“you’ll save maybe a couple of bucks” because of where I live, Elixirs go for $17.00. I save over $20!

A lot of people don’t like dealing with eBay, I get that, however, i’ve Bought, & sold on eBay for many years, with minimal problems. I’ve bought guitars from guitar shops where i’ve Had problems too!

To each their own.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

“you’ll save maybe a couple of bucks” because of where I live, Elixirs go for $17.00. I save over $20!

A lot of people don’t like dealing with eBay, I get that, however, i’ve Bought, & sold on eBay for many years, with minimal problems. I’ve bought guitars from guitar shops where i’ve Had problems too!

To each their own.

 

Thats just another reason not to use Elixrs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, on the May 2012 Bird - notes say they were too zingy, but I don't lay too much into that as I didn't know the guitar well at that point.

It happened the same summer the Bird was born.

 

But I played a lot with Masterbuilt 80/20 as Gibson claims they are the factory strings and I really loved the sound it had when I got it.

Last week I put on a set of original factory-strings - they have bronze end-balls where Masterbuilts have silver - and though they are 6 years old too and played a lot,

the guitar sounds magnificent with those.

It's as if the voice gets a bit more core and provides some wonderful smokey trebs that makes the B and high E fuller, , , the whole register slightly fatter.

A plain Salvation Army C-chord - like when I got it - sometimes makes the best acoustic I've ever heard.

 

I'm totally nerdy about this as I want to be able to recreate this factory-sound anytime.

Normally not a coated man - it's as if the layer comes between me and the instrument - but in this case I keep wondering if the factory steel has a slight coating,

almost un-noticeable after a goooood use, but still working in that subtle way, which creates the precious difference.

 

Admit precisely this is the biggest acoustic riddle for me : The faded but genuine factory Bird-sound.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Far out, man, , , , , , and fellow forumites . . . .

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...