-
A scooped mid, or bright guitar I would not use them on.
-
They're louder than the normal Earthwood strings, have a nice bright tone, and are basically the perfect rhythm guitar strings, in my mind
-
I'm a beginner at acoustic guitar, and these are top notch and sound great even on a Rogue guitar.
-
While I could imagine these being a touch too bright on a maple guitar or a cheaper Taylor, anything built with cedar, mahogany, or rosewood -- or any warm-sounding guitar, for that matter, will surely improve with a set of these strings
-
Just purchased the guitar so unsure what was on it
-
Really makes playing a small guitar more enjoyable.
-
That guitar is a very loud guitar already.
-
I'm 63 and then playing guitar a long time these are the nicest guitar strings I put on my guitar so far nice crisp clear beltones makes my $300 guitar sound like $1,000 guitar without any hesitation I would recommend
-
Without question, these are the best guitar strings I've ever played, by a long shot
-
On some guitars these strings sound amazing, and for the price they are worth investigating.
-
Pretty good acoustic guitar strings
-
I'm a gym teacher and hang a guitar in my office to get the stress out
-
Great guitar strings
-
Just maybe not if you are looking to play more of a lead guitar
-
Great guitar strings, I use Ernie Ball only for my Luna acoustic.
-
I've been playing for 30 odd years and no not how to abuse a guitar
-
(I'm curious if they will sound good on a smaller body cedar-topped guitar)
-
Have always wanted to find some strings to brighten up this guitar and these definitely do that
-
Also, I'd like to note that they sounded extremely thin and unbalanced on my vintage Yari (which is a very hard guitar to make sound unpleasant)
-
The G string snapped and unraveled at the tuning peg as I was stringing my guitar at less than full tension
-
Within seconds the G string (24) broke (at the bridge again)
-
Broke a G on the 3rd day, replaced with spare, Broke a D on day 6 on stage playing.