Keep the fibre parsimonious when becoming different electric guitar strings. Learn to shift electric guitar strings withexpert tips from a veteran musician in this free video about electric guitars. Expert: Floyd Kunz Contact: www.theacousticmusician.com Bio: Floyd Kunz has been personification instruments given he was twelve years old. Currently, he functions for the Acoustic Musician. Filmmaker: Michael Burton




Great video. Helped me replace my broken string. Thanks.
he says tune it to pitch sry to correct u
haha u made me giggle mister ruggle and jeffy
I like how at the end he says: tune it you bitch.
god vid. i had the hardest time changing strings, ruined like 4 high e strings. finally used this method and got it as well as i could.
before, the windings weren’t lined up right, they were all over the peg which i hear can eventually cause the string to break. you need it coiled neatly.
@littlealien123
I’m hear taking them all off at once messes with the string tension. Play it safe and do it one at a time.
nah thats how i change mine
which strings are better : wound and nickel?
nope =)
If you have a Floyd Rose, change each string one at a time (E and E and work your way to center) or you mess up the balance and have to use the Wedge method. On a Std strat (classic or modern) the one string at a time is preferred as the springs will pull the tremolo into wood body.
erm, i knw how to do this, so, u dont need to take it into a guitar shop. just, get an allen key. and loosen the truss rod. if you dont know what that is, its a very large screw that is found at the top of the neck. normally, there is a plastic plate, covering it. unscrew that and voila. but be careful. if u loosen it too much, then u will be screwed. say goodbye to guitar. lol hope it helps:)
omg.. anyone who cant figure this out… ur a genius
i have a strat copy will i screw up my guitar neck if i take all the strings off at once?
It’s very unlikely to be a problem with the strings and probably a problem with the frets or truss rod in your guitar neck. Take it into a music shop they’ll sort it out for ya
QFT
Good video. My fender sounds great.
hmm am not sure if i should do it my self..i mean tight the string…would something go wrong?
Thanks a lot, my string just broke. -.- Totally snapped my string.
you need your action raised take the guitar to a guitar store
i got all that, but my problem is, when i tighten the guitar string, the string gets so close to the neck the it is touching the frets,and then when i pluck the string, it makes a buzzing sound and no clear no whatsoever, can someone help me? i keep ruining strings this way, and im tired of wasting money on strings that end up not working. if it helps, the type of guitar that i use is an ESP/LTD Viper 50. SOMEONE PLEASE HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
thank you thank you thank you i now know how to change strings on my guitar oh god thank you now i dont have to pay 20 bucks to get my strings changed
You might also try taking an allen wrench and finding out where the truss rod is accessed on your guitar(usually underneath the plastic cover on the headstock where the neck starts) Do that and see if loosening it would help your situation and stop the buzz. I would recommend putting the bridge back to how it was first and then trying this, just to keep a balance. Hope that helps you man. Peace
why does expert village put these videos up they are all so unclear
Yes, the nut can cause that. But naturally the lower string will usually do that on a new set. After you break them in, they will not buzz as bad. If you are playing an electric, I wouldn’t worry at all. Through an amp, you will not hear the buzz at all.
Some advice… don’t but DR unless you are buying the color coated strings. Their plain strings rust and corrode in under a month. I recommend Elixir. I’ve used DR for years and their regular uncoated strings go bad very fast.
Nevermind, I figured it out.