sure go for it , I mean they're just made of copper on the exterior. I used Folk Music guitar strings wound with silver and silk inside of them on a death metal guitar for a laugh and it worked fine.
those strings where called silk and steel by D'Addario
the only concern would be if you've got pickups on that guitar because bronze wouldn't pick up as much sound through the pickups magnets as steel or nickel
Guitar strings aren't seperated between electric and acoustic, the varieties are nylon, steel... etc.
A normal Acoustic/Electric guitar has 6 strings, and a normal bass guitar has 4 strings. There are also guitars with more strings, i.e. a bass guitar with 5 strings.
For the same gauge designation, yes. "Standard" or "Regular" gauge acoustic strings are .013 to .056. Those would be considered very heavy strings on electric guitar, where "Standard" or "Regular" gauge strings would be .010 to .046.
No!it doesnt matter,it only matters when u place bass guitar strings on electric or acoustic guitar!
This is exactly correct. Yes, Resonator Guitars are a type of acoustic guitar, and they do have metal cones as opposed to sound boards. They were made to be louder than typical acoustic guitars.
In my opinion, electric guitar strings gets out of tune faster because the strings are not as thick as acoustic guitar strings. So, thicker strings make it stay in tune longer.
they both have strings.
There are several differences between electric bass and an acoustic guitar. A bass guitar has only four strings, which are thicker, while an acoustic guitar has thinner strings and has six of them.
Guitar strings aren't seperated between electric and acoustic, the varieties are nylon, steel... etc.
A normal Acoustic/Electric guitar has 6 strings, and a normal bass guitar has 4 strings. There are also guitars with more strings, i.e. a bass guitar with 5 strings.
For the same gauge designation, yes. "Standard" or "Regular" gauge acoustic strings are .013 to .056. Those would be considered very heavy strings on electric guitar, where "Standard" or "Regular" gauge strings would be .010 to .046.
6 strings like a regular guitar
No!it doesnt matter,it only matters when u place bass guitar strings on electric or acoustic guitar!
The electric guitar is heavier, the acoustic is hollow, both can be plugged into amps acoustics but might not be able to, they have six strings... That's all I can say...
No, but it's best to play acoustic then move onto electric, because if you learn electric first, then transition to acoustic your fingers will be used to electric guitar strings and won't be tough enough to play chords well on an acoustic.
you have a bass if it looks like an electric or a traditional acoustic.
This is exactly correct. Yes, Resonator Guitars are a type of acoustic guitar, and they do have metal cones as opposed to sound boards. They were made to be louder than typical acoustic guitars.