Photo of the Day
Shoutbox

dp: dude
346 days ago

Bango_Rilla: Shout Bananas!!
301 days ago

BillyBlastOff: See you kiddies at the Convention!
285 days ago

GDW: showman
236 days ago

Emilien03: https://losg...
158 days ago

Pyronauts: Happy Tanks-Kicking!!!
151 days ago

glennmagi: CLAM SHACK guitar
137 days ago

Hothorseraddish: surf music is amazing
117 days ago

dp: get reverberated!
67 days ago

Clint: “A Day at the Beach” podcast #237 is TWO HOURS of NEW surf music releases. https://link...
15 hours ago

Please login or register to shout.

IRC Status
  • racc

Join them in the #ShallowEnd!

Need help getting started?

Current Polls

No polls at this time. Check out our past polls.

Current Contests

No contests at this time. Check out our past contests.

Donations

Help us meet our monthly goal:

35%

35%

Donate Now

Cake April Birthdays Cake
SG101 Banner

SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink FLATWOUNDS vs NORMAL wound

New Topic
Goto Page: 1 2 Next

what's the difference?
feel?
sound?
etc?

Last edited: Jul 20, 2013 12:20:41

horax wrote:

what's the difference?
feel?
sound?
etc?

There are more than many discussions about this. Even a random look through these will help you out.

http://surfguitar101.com/search/?q=flatwound&models=forums.topic
http://surfguitar101.com/forums/topic/793/

I like their feel under my fingers, their sound and that they're quiet as I slide my fingers over them.

This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got.

Last edited: Jul 19, 2013 23:58:54

horax wrote:

what's the difference?
feel?
sound?
etc?

Both - round wound strings will tend to have a brighter sound than flat wounds and will generally sustain longer. Flat wounds will have a bit of a darker, warmer sound (especially the nickel flat-wounds as opposed to stainless steel flat-wounds). Flat wounds will also give you less string noise and will be easier on your fingers.

Years ago I was in a working band that practiced 2-3 times a week and played out 2-3 times a week - at the time I was using round wound strings on my bass and my fingers suffered for it - they were practically bleeding from all the playing I was doing. I switched over to flat wound bass strings which saved my fingers!

Last edited: Jul 20, 2013 00:14:17

Flat wounds will give you a stronger fundamental than round wounds.
I was a round wound hold out for years but now almost all of my Surf/Instro guitars have flats. For me it's about sound

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

Any opinions about how flats sound with FUZZ pedals?

This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got.

Noel,
I think they sound great. "Arigato" on our record is flats with a little fuzz as well as "Hippy Trip"

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

Flatwounds also seem to tame the harshness of a certain Boss pedal

Weren't most guitars strung with flats 50+ years ago? Think about the evolution of guitar playing that occurred in the mid-60s with the dispersion of Chicago blues styles through British and American bands, where the sound of slinky strings being bent under a fair amount of compression replaced in popular music the sounds of strong picking technique and clean amplification. Ernie Ball's custom gauges came on the scene in LA to respond to the need for lighter roundwounds in the post-surf era (may we never speak of such times again!).
A surf guitar rig: Fender or similar solidbody (generally) 11+ flats, reverb, heavy+clean amplification is played in such a different way than an electric blues rig that it obtains to nearly a different instrument altogether.
What were Country & Western guitarists usuing in the Buck Owens era and earlier? I know lap steels are typically strung with rounds so the player can generate some friction that 'bows' the strings with the bar for added sustain. Don Rich must have been using slinky rounds but I can't imagine Chet would have needed them for his classical technique.
The surf flatwound aesthetic is essentially coming from a different playing tradition than mainstream rock with its blues and C/W roots. Surf guitar, although a rock form, avoids mimicry of vocal sounds – not much pitch bending and no overt reliance on sustain. Flatwounds, which produce a stronger fundamental pitch with much less in the way of overtones, are also the choice of jazz guitarists, who do not want to crowd complex and dissonant chords with a bunch of overtones, which slinky rounds emphasize. Those ringing overtones are the bread and butter of overdriven rock tone, where harmonic distortion makes a P5 w/or w/o an octave sound like a thick major voicing.
We haven't even mentioned the overwhelming influence of the Fender Spring Reverb unit which transforms the fundamental-heavy tones of a single-coil guitar palm muted into something completely electronic and as removed from acoustic jazz as electric blues, but in a different direction altogether.
I played with a surf guitarist who, though not enjoying the luxury of classic gear, spoke about this or that element as 'more surf' than another. E.g., Jag is 'more surf' than Harmony Rocket (hollowbody) or even Fender Mustang. Flat 11s are 'more surf' than round 10s. I think the point was to direct my own playing in a more traditional surf direction, where heavy flats on an axe classic to the genre would more readily produce the requisite sounds.
Fascinating topic!

Squink Out!

I like that post you put together there. Accurately assessing the gear AT THE TIME i most important. Sure people were moving all the strings "down one" and then using a banjo string for a high E. And when the ballsy round wounds came along, it took off for thier sound.

i bet there were also a lot of small groups, one hit wonder types, that "well we could only get this in town" so that's what they used.

Very good post JObeast +1

I use flats for surf stuff because the sound of flats is mostly fundamental tone frequency. Reverb seems to me to be all about harmonics, so, the end result when using flats a big solid note, with the added reverb effect. I use D'Addario Chromes because of a more HiFi sound than other flat brands.

For the Panamericans, I use RotoSound .012" roundwounds on a Jaguar with stock style pickups which blended better with the other guitar which was a dryer, more pushed {clipping} type of sound. This gave me an edge to push the rock harder, or back off the guitar volume to clean it up a bit. I used an original tweed Bassman, tube Echoplex, and a 1962 Reverb Unit set with a low mix level. Also, a Lovepedal Les Lius set on the tweed Twin setting to sound like I was pushing the Bassman harder than I actually was.

Flats did not have the correct dynamics for this music.

The other end of things... .010" GHS Burnished for rock, and all other forms.

Nice post, JObeast.

A lot of modern surf players use rounds and they sound amazing. But many use flats and they too sound amazing. It really depends on the guitar/amp combo you run and what type of sound you're after.

I have round 11s on my jazzmaster with antiquities. The rounds brighten up the darker sound of this guitar and make for some really cool sounding tones. Plus I use it for more than surf (alternative rock and post rock), but it can surf for sure.

I have a Gretsch pro jet with TV Jones T-Armand pickups and I put flat 12s on it. Twangs a little more than I like to twang, to be honest. And the sound is almost too clean. I think because its missing all the overtones that JObeast was speaking of. Its clean tone cuts like an edge. I can get surfy sounds out of it, but I need to use a pre-amp to really push my tank. But with a nice delay and echo on this guitar, or some trem, I can get that retro pre-surf instro sound perfect. I could probably jazz with it too if I knew all those crazy chords :p

I just picked up a CIJ reissue Jag. It needs some work and a couple mods (new pickguard and mustang bridge on the way, plus I need to work on the trem, its noisy and the arm is super loose). Once that gets done, I'm going to try flats on it. I think this guitar will be my dedicated surf guitar. I'm anxious to hear it when its all set up Smile

Last edited: Jul 27, 2013 11:39:58

Well... they did have round wounds in the surf era. Dick Dale, Eddie Bertrand, The Atlantics, etc. all used round wounds.

Site dude - S3 Agent #202
Need help with the site? SG101 FAQ - Send me a private message - Email me

"It starts... when it begins" -- Ralf Kilauea

Flats make your Jazzy or Jag sound more surfier

He who dies with the most tubes... wins

Surf Daddies

Brian wrote:

Well... they did have round wounds in the surf era. Dick Dale, Eddie Bertrand, The Atlantics, etc. all used round wounds.

Which is why I could not get the sound I wanted from that really nice Jaguar someone borrowed me recently: When I see a white/tortoise Jaguar I immediately think of Eddie Bertrand's sound, but with the flats strung on this peticular guitar I could not get anywhere near it. The result was that I could not even play this thing properly although it had a good setup: The lower strings just did not "push" enough in comparision with the trebly edge of the higher strings. So I had to hit the lower strings harder than usually and in consequence my whole playing fell apart.

Of course I gave back the guitar BEFORE I found out that Eddie used rounds. I just thought flats are mandatory on Jaguars and Jazzmasters, because that's what you read most of the time. Confused

SlacktoneDave wrote:

I use flats for surf stuff because the sound of flats is mostly fundamental tone frequency.

Dave, have you always played flats for surf, even in the early Nightrider-days? Do you remember what strings John Blair had on his guitars?

And while we are at it: Slacktone are overdue for another european tour. We all still fondly remember your last visit to Berlin (my old band opened for you) and actually I get asked quite regularily by some folks whether I heard anything.

Los Apollos - cinematic surf music trio (Berlin)
"Postcards from the Scrapyard" Vol. 1, 2 & 3 NOW available on various platforms!
"Chaos at the Lobster Lounge" available as LP and download on Surf Cookie Records!

I gave Flats a run for about two years on my Strat, Tele and Goldtop w/P90s. They had a thumpin' very old school tone about them and worked great playing clean and with a bit of greasy tone. I just found after a few years I missed the clarity (piano) like sound of roundwound strings. I also find that roundwound strings bounce off the neck differently then flatwounds, and I can easyly darken roundwounds with the guitar tone knob. Playing in a pretty traditional blues band, I found that roundwounds would sit better in the mix/frequency range with drums, amplified harmonica and bass. Basically play the stings that inspire you to create and play while meeting the sound you hear in your head.

I don't know if this will help anyone who is on the fence about rounds or flats but I use mostly flats with Crazy Aces but I use a specific fuzz pedal (pigtronix disnortion) on a specific setting (there are 6 different fuzz choices on this pedal and I set it for low, low fuzz) at times that gives me a more twangy, brighter, biting tone, not necessarily a fuzz sound. This way I've got the flats for the string fundamental, old school thing but at the stomp of a switch have a more biting, round wound type sound.
Works well.

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

I recall someone in Surf Beat (hoping it wasn't a Beach Boy) saying that they never had to change their flatwound strings because they never went dead.

I am but one dude~ Zonker Harris

Zonker wrote:

I recall someone in Surf Beat (hoping it wasn't a Beach Boy) saying that they never had to change their flatwound strings because they never went dead.

Strings never sound dead until you put a new set on.

JakeDobner wrote:

Strings never sound dead until you put a new set on.

Truth.

Put Thomastik-Infeld flats on my Squier Jazzmaster... straight into an old 1967 DeLuxe Reverb.. bingo.. (Rhythm).
Just put flats on my Mexican Strat (maple neck) and that instrument came to life and is useful for the first time (to me) as a 2nd back-up guitar for this band...

Having a blast as #2 guitarist in a surf band in Boston ("The Fathoms") Smile

Goto Page: 1 2 Next
Top