String an Electric Guitar

String an Electric Guitar

Whether your strings pop, or simply start sounding lifeless, you'll need to know how to change them.
You Will Need
* A guitar
* Wire cutters
* New strings
* A string winder (optional)
* A tuner (optional)

WARNING: Never remove all six strings at the same time, which disrupts the balance of tension, making it necessary to reset the guitar’s neck, or adjust the bridge.

Step 1: Remove the string
Rotate the tuning peg to unwind the popped or old string, and extract it from the tuning peg. Using the wire cutters, snip off the crimped part of the string, throw it away, and slip the rest of the string off the guitar, being careful not to let the tip of the string scratch the finish. Throw the old string away.

Step 2: Get the new string ready
Remove and unravel the new string from your pack. Check the package to make sure you’re using the correct gauge string.

Step 3: Line up the tuning peg with the neck
Stand the guitar up on its end. Turn the tuning key so that the hole in the tuning peg is in line with the neck – not perpendicular to it.

Step 4: Thread the string
Thread the tip of the nonball end of the string through the tailpiece, over the bridge (making sure it’s in the proper groove in the bridge piece), up the neck, and over the nut. Anchor the string under the correct tree, if your guitar has them. Thread the end of the string through the hole of the tuning peg, from the top.

Step 5: Tighten the string
Hold the string against the nut, leaving a few inches of slack. Turn the tuning key three to four times away from the headstock, allowing the slack end of the string to tighten. Do not tighten too much, which could cause the string to break.

Step 6: Snip the end
Crimp the end of the string at a right angle away from the headstock, a half-inch from the tuning peg, and cut the string a half-inch past the crimp.

Step 7: Tune the string
Tune the string, either by ear or by using a tuner.

Step 8: Move on to the next string.

Hosted by howcast.com
Creator's Site: www.howcast.com/users/KeithMcKellar
Curated By: Howcast

Comments

Add your comment:

Who Needs Jump Rope When You Have a Flexible Friend

Breakdancing. Acrobatics. Gymnastics. Human jump roping fits in all. And why not? It's frickin' awesome. (Image credit: Flickr user envycleopatra.)

Indian Spiderman Defies Gravity (and Death)

Real life spiderman, Jyothi Rai of India, spends his time entertaining tourists by scaling walls of the Chitradurga Fort. The daredevil works completely harness free. Inspired? WonderHowTo's Climbing ...

Creepy Crawler Ant Robot

Wow, this robot has incredible movement. "A-Pod is an ant inspired hexapod robot with a 2 DOF abdomen (tail), a 3 DOF head with large mandibles. 6 legs with 3 DOF each. Total 25 servos ...

Remote Control Your Lawn Mower

Time to make those lazy Sunday afternoons even lazier. Instructables member johndavid400 has posted a full HowTo on modding your lawn mower to operate via remote control. " ...How to make your ...

Why Buy a Car When You Can Build-It-Yourself?

BBC show Top Gear has built a homemade electric car in just 18 hours: the Hammerhead Eagle i-Thrust. According to Autocar,  "...the Hammerhead Eagle i-Thrust is a road legal car/shed that ...

loading...