I decided to restring my classical guitar this evening. I haven’t done it for a while, so I’ve been looking at YouTube videos. It’s all coming back to me. I had a package of D’Addario Pro Arte Strings, which are the ones I’ve always used, just like this picture.
I took the new strings out of their sealed baggie and I seem to have two B strings and no G string.
The strings are labeled and numbered as follows:
1 - E (nylon)
2 - B (nylon)
2 - B (nylon)
4 - D (silver)
5 - A (silver)
6 - E (silver)
I know I haven’t done this for a while… but two B strings and no G string. That’s not right, right?
I bought these strings ages ago, so I’m not going to try to return them. But I will take them back to the store and ask WTF. Do I need to open the package of strings in the store from now on?
I have been buying guitar strings for 53 years and that has never happened to me. So it’s rare. I would see if the store will exchange them for a good set. They just get credit from the manufacturer anyway so they may not ask for a receipt for a like-for-like exchange.
THelma: Play those things until they break. String it with what you have and I don’t think it will make a drop of difference. If it does play harder, and they will break, and you might enjoy it.
If the material degraded that’s good. You don’t want them to last forever. I’m not sure why every fact of physics means you need to throw something away.
Just my experience: I play Jimmy page style “banjo strung” guitar. So most of the higher numbered strings are much lower for me, by a whole string sometimes. I buy strings by the dozen and I have used B strings for G and lots of combos experimenting with string thickness, and using up strings that are left in the drawer. You’d be surprised at how adaptable you are with the string.
But I play steel strings. When you try to use a B string for a G on classical the B may snap. You have to give it a shot.
If you don’t have a tuner, there are many online. I prefer the Snark SN5X on Amazon for not much money. Brighter display and quicker response compared to the older SN5 model.