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Strings for a fretless


OliverBlackman
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So I've got a nice fretless bass, and to protect the board I fitted it with TI flats. I had TI flats before and liked the lower tension compared to other flats. But on my P bass I have a similar aged set of Rotosound flats and they have so much more colour in tone than the TI's.

Are there any other options that would have less tension that the Rotosound's, but still wouldn't mark the board, and have plenty of tone?

I've heard of half-wounds and tape-wounds but never tried them. What's everyones experience?

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Sadowsky flats or DR flats - both are much more forgiving and flexible than most flats, and have plenty of life. Black tape wounds can be nice, but they also break the earth connection at the bridge so can make your instrument a bit buzzy (not in a good way) in some venues.

My favourite for fretless is still DR Sunbeams (or Pure Blues). Nickel round wounds, but gentle on fingerboards and it takes a long time before the marks are significant, even on a rosewood board.

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You'll more mwah with round wounds, more of a double bass sound with flats.

Just use whatever you like the sound of best, which in my case is compounded because I like both :).

My two favourite fretless players are Steve Lawson and Michael Manring. Steve uses flats, Michael uses rounds.

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To date, if you like roundwounds, the Fodera nickels are really good, way far better than the D’Addario nickels which is a standard to compare other brands. If you want to go to tapewounds, I've tried (almost, as you can't be sure) everything available on the market and the best tone will be achieved with the LaBella gold white nylon, but I love very fast attack and endless sustain on fretless... And I hate flatwounds on fretless, because they kill the sound I want to hear.

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[quote name='OliverBlackman' timestamp='1507730862' post='3387568']
So nickels wear less than steels? I generally use steels so I had a set on the bass when I got it, but I was shocked at how quickly the board marked. Might be worth buying some nickels and tape wounds I guess and comparing?
[/quote]

The same goes for fretted basses - steel is a lot harder than nickel so will wear the frets down quicker than nickel.

As with all basses I've found that different strings suit different fretless basses. TIs on a Stingray and Chromes on a Precision

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[quote name='OliverBlackman' timestamp='1507730862' post='3387568']
So nickels wear less than steels? I generally use steels so I had a set on the bass when I got it, but I was shocked at how quickly the board marked. Might be worth buying some nickels and tape wounds I guess and comparing?
[/quote]

The speed of strings marking your fingerboard could be technique related.
On a fretted bass you can achieve vibrato by using the same type of motion as a string bend, if you use this motion on a fretless the board will mark quicker.
Vibrato should be achieved using the technique employed on all traditional 'fretless' string instruments and a string bend becomes a slide.
This way you are merely pressing the string into the board rather than grinding it across it.

Edited by Maude
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