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How to Change Electric Strings

Electric Guitar Survival Pack

Fender Survival Pack for Electric Guitarnone

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If you are here, you are well on your way to giving your guitar new life! Grab a pack of your favorite guitar strings, put on your patience hat, and we'll get right into changing your strings! If you want to learn a little more about guitar strings before you purchase a set, See Guitar Strings Overview. Have an acoustic guitar? Learn how to change acoustic guitar strings

There are different methods of changing guitar strings out there, but following these steps can help reduce breakage and increase string life. If you're an advanced player, try the Locking Method.

1. Position your guitar

Lay your guitar on a flat soft surface such as a carpeted floor. If you don't have a flat carpeted area, lay something soft down where you plan to put your guitar such as a towel or a soft cloth.

It is best to replace your strings one at a time in order to keep the tension on the neck relatively the same.

2. Remove the old string from the tuning-head

Starting with the low E-string, take a plastic string-winder and slip it over the tuner-head (machinehead) on the headstock. Turn the string-winder to quickly slacken the string and remove it from the tuner's string post. Be careful not to scratch the finish on the headstock. A pair of needle-nose pliers can sometimes be handy when removing the string from the post. Be careful not to injure yourself with the end of the string. It may have a sharp edge from when it was previously cut.

3. To remove the string from the bridge:

After you remove the string from the tuning-head, make a clean cut with wire-cutters in the middle of the string about halfway down the neck. This will allow you to quickly pull the old string out of the bottom of the bridge.

Let's put your fresh strings on! Take the string out of the paper packet and unravel it (it's probably wound around itself in a circle). You'll notice one end has a ball at the end of it.

4. Thread the string through the bridge

Thread the string through the hole in the bridge and the ball end of the string should catch on the outside of the string hole on the bridge. Lay the string down the neck towards the headstock.

At the headstock, turn the tuning head so that the hole in the post is parallel to the nut (the nut is the piece that fits across the beginning of the neck that has grooves in it and holds the strings).

When you thread the string across the groove in the nut, you may be wondering which way to wrap the string around the post. As a general rule, you should place the string on the inside edge of the post ' the side that is the farthest away from the edge of the headstock.

Now to attach it to the string post:

With the string on the inside of the string-post, pull it tight and wind the string around the string-post towards the outside of the edge of the headstock, one full turn. Think 'up and over' as you wrap the string around the string-post. Once you've wrapped it around once, thread it through the string-post hole. NOTE: For the plain strings (the ones that don't have a winding around them G, B, E) wrap them around the post 3-4 times before putting them through the hole.

Pull the string tight after you get it through the other side of the hole. Make a right angle in the string at the point it emerges from the hole bending it slightly down. This will prevent your strings from unwinding and slipping. Now you're ready to tighten it up.

Turn the tuning head gradually making the string tighter. Keep an eye on the peg holding the other end of the string in place at the bridge. If it starts to slide up, push down on it with your finger as you continue to tighten the string up. At this point, you can tune the string up to the proper note with an electronic tuner. I prefer to tighten the strings up to a point where they're not longer loose, but not necessarily up to pitch at this point. I change all the strings, stretch them quite a bit, and then tune them up to pitch.

After you put the strings on, you'll have some left over string on each string-post (I call them whiskers). Clip off the whiskers as close to the posts as possible with your wire-cutters. Never leave them on since they can be dangerous.

Changing your strings: Locking Method

The difference between the basic method and locking method involves just the string-post.

Remove the old string and attach the new one to the bridge using the same method as described previously.

Lay the string down the neck towards the headstock. Poke the end of the string through the hole in the string-post that is on the inside of the post (the hole closest to the centre of the headstock). The string should come out the other side moving towards the outside edge of the headstock of your guitar. Leave a little slack in your string this time.

Now take the string and bend it towards the center of the headstock around the post guiding it under the part of the string that is entering the post on the other side. As soon as you have the string on the other side and underneath itself, pull it tight and bend it upwards at a right angle.

Now grab your string-winder and wind the string around the post. Make sure the string is wrapping downwards towards the base of the post with the post turning towards the outside edge of the headstock (not towards the center of the headstock). Try to keep it neat to avoid string overlap. See how you are winding the string over the part of the string you bent upwards? You are locking the string in place.