kevin_lindsay Posted yesterday at 10:34 Posted yesterday at 10:34 (edited) I've bought a set - better be decent at this price The most expensive strings I had bought previously were a set of LaBella "Jamerson" 1954 flats at around £50 (which seemed ludicrously expensive) Anyone else ordered a set yet? Or, any thoughts? Edited yesterday at 11:48 by kevin_lindsay 2 Quote
fretmeister Posted yesterday at 10:37 Posted yesterday at 10:37 Quite a bargain compared to those Dogal Flatwounds! Even if I won the lottery I'm not sure I could get my head round paying that much for strings. 1 Quote
Linus27 Posted yesterday at 12:37 Posted yesterday at 12:37 I guess the good thing is it will be a one time payment as they'll never need replacing. Still, I doubt they are any different to regular Ernie Ball Flats so you are paying for the name. 2 Quote
Burns-bass Posted yesterday at 12:56 Posted yesterday at 12:56 Pino must be demanding a decent amount of cash for his name… 2 Quote
steantval Posted yesterday at 20:02 Posted yesterday at 20:02 I would pay £90 for them if they made me play like him. 1 2 Quote
Lozz196 Posted yesterday at 20:10 Posted yesterday at 20:10 6 minutes ago, steantval said: I would pay £90 for them if they made me play like him. Cheap at half the price - I accurately doubt I’d manage that if I paid 50 times more for them. Quote
TheRev Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago £90? If they last 30 years like a good set of flats should then they're a bargain. Quote
Bigwan Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago Paying quite a premium over the "normal" cobalt flats from Ernie Ball... Be interested to hear what the difference is beyond custom gauges... Quote
Beedster Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Whole set still cheaper than a single decent DB string But, yeh, they seem really expensive by the standards of electric bass strings, at least with DB strings there really - or usually is - is a noticeable difference in quality and tone as you go up through the price bands, I wonder if the same's true here? Quote
wateroftyne Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago How much better can they be than the tried & tested likes of La Bella etc? Are the silks made from unicorn manes? Quote
Beedster Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 5 minutes ago, wateroftyne said: How much better can they be than the tried & tested likes of La Bella etc? Are the silks made from unicorn manes? Well they are precision polished, which perhaps suggests that the standard strings aren't precision polished, merely polished imprecisely 4 Quote
Dan Dare Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago I avoid anything - instruments, strings, etc - with an artist's name on it. You're bound to be charged a premium. Same applies to virtually anything, really - clothing, fridge-freezers, cuddly toys. If it bears an endorsee's name, you're going to pay more. Quote
Dad3353 Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) 4 minutes ago, Dan Dare said: ... If it bears an endorsee's name, you're going to pay more. Sue Ryder..? Edited 6 hours ago by Dad3353 2 Quote
Bagman Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 6 hours ago, wateroftyne said: How much better can they be than the tried & tested likes of La Bella etc? Are the silks made from unicorn manes? I have instruments with Chromes, GHS, Labella and Sadowsky flats The Sadowsky are significantly more expensive than the GHS and Chromes I don't know what is "better" just that I think the Labella's are "better" on the Jazz and the Chromes are "better" on the Precision etc .. Quote
Reggaebass Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago It’s a bit pricey for a set of flats imo, but if it turns out that they feel and sound exceptionally great for you then it’s worth it , you don’t know until you try, I held back buying the Olinto signature flats because I thought they were too expensive ,but gave in and bought them eventually and I’m really glad I did as I’m liking the change from my normal strings 1 Quote
JoeEvans Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Strings can potentially make more of a difference to the sound of a bass than any amp or pedal, so if paying £50 over the odds makes your instrument sound amazing, it might seem cheap at the price compared to a £400 preamp or £2k amp... 1 Quote
Misdee Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) If these strings are a serious proposition by Ernie Ball and Pino then it begs the question, what problem are they solving? What was wrong or lacking in some way with the La Bella and Thomastik strings PIno was using previously and how do these new strings remedy that? I've watched the YT video of PIno demoing them and talking about flats in general, but it's all very vague and non-specific about what exactly is special about these strings. To my ears even with PIno playing them they sound like just another new set of flat wounds, with the caveat that new flats don't sound very good to me. Ernie Ball don't make inferior products, I'm sure these are very good strings. However, in marketing terms I suspect what makes them extraordinary is that they cost more. Edited 2 hours ago by Misdee 1 Quote
spongebob Posted 59 minutes ago Posted 59 minutes ago 5 hours ago, Dad3353 said: Sue Ryder..? Some of us who’ve been on here long enough get that! 😁 1 1 Quote
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