
Tennessee Jedi wrote:I have never thought about what kind of string Bob uses.
Does he use flatwounds ?
I always assumed they were bigger than regular strings ; or do they come in the same gauge as regular strings ?
Sounds like you are liking them .....
Does this mean wangy bar Bob riffs are out ?


jdsmodulus wrote:what comp did you go with? Ive been thinking of dbx or behringer. I also use pre>power>speakers set up and have wondered about this for a while. My ue has a comp/limiter and I do use that I just thought why not get a rack comp. hmmmm?



SarnoMusicSolutions wrote:I think the flatwound factor is the #1 Bob Weir guitar tone factor, above all other variables.
Chorus is optional depending on the era. Compression is also optional. Various amps, preamps, guitars, pickups, speakers, but the flatwound thing, as I understand it, has been his #1 constant for the longest stretch of time.
Brad
strumminsix wrote:First to the flatwounds. WOW is all I can say. I will never string a guitar I will use for rhythm, especially Weir stuff, with anything else.
I used the D'Addario ECG23's. ... The flatwould G was a surprise to my fingers.
From there I've been experimenting with compression.
Highballin' wrote: and I was wondering what compression does. ?

FretfulDave wrote:strumminsix wrote:First to the flatwounds. WOW is all I can say. I will never string a guitar I will use for rhythm, especially Weir stuff, with anything else.
I used the D'Addario ECG23's. ... The flatwould G was a surprise to my fingers.
From there I've been experimenting with compression.
Strummin, so what weight strings? I used flatwounds when I first started playing guitar. The third string being wound is a bit different and I thought they sounded very deep and "jazzy". But that was 38 years ago. I am sure things have changed since. The gauges were pretty heavy back then and they are not great to play lead with, if one has a need for that.Highballin' wrote: and I was wondering what compression does. ?
I think compression basically evens out the peaks and lows of the guitar signal amplitude, i.e., the overall output signal to the amp remains very even after compression and you get some extra sustain at the price of the dynamic range you would normally get depending on how hard you pick and strum (no pun intended Strummin...). But I am sure there are folks who can comment more thoroughly on the matter or correct me if I have misspoken.
Good info. Interesting thread.
Dave


Highballin' wrote:This is definitely something I want to expiriment with. just wondering what a good way to go would be. Cheap obviously. $100 bucks or less.


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