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New Strings on Bongo Sounding Dead After Less Than a Week I have a Musicman Bongo 5 string, which sounds amazing with new strings. I am in a band that has recently been playing 2-3x week. If I put new strings on Friday, by next week they are already sounding dull. Unfortunately with strings being so expensive, I am trying see if others have this same issue, and if there is any good solution? Thanks, |
a little rubbing alcohol on a cloth may go a long way in this situation , just rub the strings down after your done playing. try to use the 99% stuff, the 75% has too much water content and may rust strings or fret wires |
I appreciate it tmdazed. I will definitely give it a shot. I have also heard that boiling the strings sometimes temporarily brings them back to life. Admittedly I am looking for a long term solution. |
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Fortunately, strings ultimately sound better when dead anyway, they give a better fundamental and just sound more like a bass once they die. So best to just get used to the sound of dead strings. I muchly prefer them dead nowadays and my string bill has dropped dramatically since then :) LS |
I use flats - they last forever!! You can EQ up the sound some if you're not a flatwound fan. |
Try a set of coated strings - not quite as bright as new nickles or steels, but close, and IME, they last about 4 times longer. http://www.daddario.com/DADProductFa...68&familyid=24 |
Heres the trick. Find a bass that sounds great to you with "broken in" strings, and go from there! And by broken in i mean settled, not dead. |
What strings are you using? Some last much longer than others. I find DR to last pretty long. |
Where are you getting your strings? Chances that if it isn't bassstringsonline you're getting ripped off. |
What makes you say that? |
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I'll just say, from experience, STAINLESS STRINGS will sound newer for longer. The strings that I've always found to do what you described are Ernie Ball nickel strings. Every set sounds great for the majority of playing a C Major scale... but after that, it's BLAH CITY! |
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If a Bongo is anywhere near as zingy as a Stingray, you will naturally notice the loss of high end presence much faster than you would notice it on a J or a P bass. I have heard some guys say that when they record they always start with a new set of rounds. |
To me, passive basses sound better with broken-in strings than active ones. So I have to change the strings on my bongo 5 way more often than my p bass regardless of the string type. But at the moment I have d'addario nickels on the bongo and I'm pretty happy with the way they're aging. I'm not losing the high mids as quickly or as much as with some other brands. You might try them and see if it's the same for you. Off topic but related, I like to let the bass choose the string. All five of my basses have different brands and different gauges. It takes time to experiment and see what string works best with a bass but it's worth it because the right string will bring out all of its strengths. |
New Strings on Bongo Sounding Dead After Less Than a Week -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I have found that if I play somewhere that is unpleasantly hot and humid that I can ruin a fresh set of strings in one day. But I have also found that in my basesment most of my basses have the strings stay good for 6 - 12 months It is a matter of sweat and oil from your fingers fouling up the strings. |
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I would consider getting some TI jazz flats for your Bongo. They are flats but sound nothing like any other flat out there. They can be EQ'd in either direction, toward a brighter rounds type sound, or to a thumpy flats type sound. Amazingly versatile. I struggled with many different string types and brands until I discovered these and they have replaced them all, round or flat. Best part? They don't die. They retain a crisp attack for pretty much as long as they are on a bass and and (though I can't prove it) actually increase in fundamental presence the more they are played. The unique thing about them being the silk under wrap, which absorbs a players sweat, creating another layer or wrap so to speak, basically bonding the inner and outer wraps together. All while staying as bright as the day they were put on, with a turn of the tone knob. |
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I'll do like that myself OP: look no further... Thanx Petrus Cheers, Wallace |
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