SOURCE: which string used for epiphone gibson lea paul special II guitar
This is really a personal choice as long as the strings are made for an electric guitar there are hundreds of different kinds, it mostly has to do with the thickness of the strings and how the thinner the string the easier it is to manulipulate, you should go to a good music store and tell them what type of music you play and they will give you some choices.
SOURCE: LP epiphone 100 "g" string problem,
well, i have this guitar, for me if i bent the string it would pop off the nut, but it went out of tune on me also becuase of the tuners. so i suggest checking the nut to make sure the string sits completely flush in there, and than also just upgrading your tuners if you can and it will be fine. but deffinately upgrading your tuners would stop that hopefully but still could be something with the nut becuase i had both. tuners = machine heads
SOURCE: Have Line 6 Variax 700 6 String Modeling Guitar
The frequency of the A string when in tune is 110Hz.
What you are hearing is actually 120Hz which is the second harmonic of the 60Hz power frequency. It would be hard for you to distinguish between 110 an 120.
Try this test: Bring something that produces a reasonable magnetic field such as a wall wart power adapter that is powered near your pickup... Then you will be able to see that you are picking up stray magnetic fields from your environment.
Humbucker pickups attempt to quash such pickup by winding the pickup so stray magnetic fields cancel in adjacent coils.
Some pickup CAN occur on your cord and also in an amp.
If you leave your cable unplugged from teh guitar you are LIKELY to pick up some of this hum... The second harmonic pickup is COMMON when devces like full wave rectifiers are driven by transformers in the area.
SOURCE: cant get the buzz out of the high E string on my Epiphone les paul guitar
A buzz on one string is not due to a pickup fault. It's rather a too low string height at the nut or a string slot that is either too wide or has too deep of an angle towards the tuner. It could however be that you had the pickup too close to the high E string creating excessive string pull.
SOURCE: Problem with the pickup sound on the 'g' string on my epiphone les paul standard
I would think the pole pieces of the pickups need adjustment but not normal, IF the string isn't dead. Definitely, need to check the saddles and the nut.
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