It is called a CAPO. It is used for changing the pitch, NOT THE TUNING of the guitar.
There is also a twelve string guitar.There is such thing as an Archguitar which has eleven strings.
with strings
There is no such thing as a mute guitar. However it is a style of playing. You play mute guitar by muting the strings by the bridge with the bottom of your hand.
6 on a regular acoustic guitar but over the years you can get 7, 8,9,10,12,13 and up to 24 I've seen on ebay. basses strings 4,5,6,7,8,9 and some even higher numbers, cool thing is some have whammy bars.
You can stretch the strings to a chromatic step or higher on a guitar. I never tried it on a violin so I can't answer to that.
taking your strings on and off the guitar several times is bad for the strings,its literally impossible to replace pickups without taking them off. another thing is you might have strings that dont sound their best with pickups they arent compatible with
is all up to you, its a comfort thing more than anything like action on a guitar I've always thought
It is that little oval thing with 3 metal tiny circles in it that are below the strings and the fretboard...there should be three in your guitar, and below them is the whammy bar, the thing that goes WheHEEEheeeHEEEhee...
If you mean what you hold in your hand to strike or pluck the guitar strings, it is a plectrum, more commonly called a flat pick or just pick.
with very thick strings like 13-56 (drop tuning strings) it comes close but theres such thing as a 6 string bass. But, get a baritone guitar for the best results as most guitars you'd have to file down the nut on the neck to make the strings fit and play proper. a baritone electric guitar is a longer necked electric guitar that is designed for bass tunings.
Not that my name references the thing your talking about, but a machine head refers to the metal knobs on the stock of the guitar that you twist in order to tune a guitar and that is what the strings are wrapped around. My name refers to the band.
Yes but the strings would be like elastic bands and would be muddy to to the point of being almost unplayable. Yes because the 4 strings on the bass are an octave lower than the 3, 4, 5, and 6 strings on any guitar.