Martin MSP3600 SP 80/20 Bronze 12-String Acoustic Guitar Str... - 2024 report by Whydis
Martin MSP3600 SP 80/20 Bronze 12-String Acoustic Guitar Strings, Extra Light
Size:80/20 12 String Extra Light | MSP3600
Martin MSP3600 Studio Performance 12-String Bronze Wound Extra Light Acoustic Guitar Strings are made with a unique composition that gives brilliance, clarity, and longevity of sound. Bronze winding is ide...
THESE STRINGS, THEY SOUND AWESOME AT AN AWESOME PRICE!!!
Great Strings - have used these on two of my Martins - haven't broken and sound awesome unplugged and with my Roland amp!
The G and D strings break almost daily as well
Great Strings for the Price!!!I bought 2 other more expensive packs and when tuning the light guage "E" string had a failure well below the threshold of tuning it to the right key with a $200 tuner that has never failed before in the past
Overall, these are my absolute favorite strings for their warm, rich, incredibly loud tone, and their amazing longevity
The tone also they are very squeaky just not right for my guitar the Martin Flex course much better which I just ordered thank you
I put these strings not even twenty-four hours ago and they have already rusted a bit and lost their tone immensely.
I tried the Martin Marquee and hated the tinny tone initially, but then loved the tone after breaking them in or getting used to the higher pitched tones, then hated them again, because they didn't last long.
They have a really great tone - not too bright, not too "tinny" sounding like some strings can sound
The elixirs might make a bad guitar sound better, but you should save the money spent on those and buy a nicer instrument. :)Read more
Which (if you have a good guitar) is way better in my opinion
Great for my acoustic Epiphone guitar, nice and easy to play with.
If you are used to Martin medium strings, but want something that you can play for a few extra hours a day without feeling as if you are overdoing things, you might like these too, but when you pick up a guitar with the Martin Medium strings, you may find that even a cheaper guitar sounds better in comparison to these on a more upscale one
First heard of using medium-gauge phosphor-bronze strings after looking up that Elliott Smith used them on an old, cheap Yamaha guitar
Remember - these will be a bit harder on the fingers than the typical nylon strings, so be patient with yourself and practice, practice, practice to build up your tolerance if you find them a bit uncomfortable at the start
They sound great for a couple of weeks and then get a bit dead.
I put these strings not even twenty-four hours ago and they have already rusted a bit and lost their tone immensely.
but they are a bit easier to play and learn to bend, etc. at this gauge.
I buy them for the longevity as I play in church every Sunday and during the week on the same set of strings for about 2 months before a string breaking or loss in quality of sound.
what that weird "scree-e-eeee-eee" sound was until the string broke
One of the strings (A, 5th string) broke as I was restringing it
Multiple strings broke while trying to tune them, I never got to play them
I didn't get a lot of playing time on em before the "G" string broke, and had worn "flat spots" in the other strings
More about Martin MSP3600 SP 80/20 Bronze 12-String Acoustic Guitar Strings, Extra Light
Size:80/20 12 String Extra Light | MSP3600
Martin MSP3600 Studio Performance 12-String Bronze Wound Extra Light Acoustic Guitar Strings are made with a unique composition that gives brilliance, clarity, and longevity of sound
Bronze winding is ideally suited for strings that have deep, rich basses and clear, bright trebles.