Different Guitars, with different bridge to nut configurations, and action height, and annotation, and saddle adjustment, and body wood... and probably a lot more reasons, can have vastly different sustain lengths. I've not noticed any particular Electric Guitar in its factory state having a set sustain length for any string. Some custom configurations with battery support can sustain much, much longer or indefinitely. The short answer to your question would be anywhere from 10 to 20 seconds.
As long as the B, G, D and A strings...
The lowest string on a guitar is an E .........
The lowest string is E (this is the thickest one) they then progress, upwards in pitch E A D G B E
The lowest note on an acoustic guitar is an open E, on the E string. the equivalent note on a bass guitar is the second fret of the D string, or the 7th fret of the A string, or the 12 fret of the E string..
depending on the the individual gauges of the six (6) guitar strings ie: E, A, D, G, B, E, of course the guitar string that is long and loose produces the lowest pitch... A good example of this are the strings on a mandolin or a 'banduria' which has shorter strings compared to the strings on the guitar...because the mandolin/banduria strings are shorter and tighter, it produces higher pitch... "short and tight=higher pitch......long and loose=lower pitch"
E-------2------------2--------------0-------0----- = Little e string B-----3---3--------3---3----------3---3---3---3-= B string G---4------------2--------------0-------0---------= G string D--------------------------------------------------- = D string A---------------------------------------------------= A string E--------------------------------------------------- = Big E string It is basically upside down, this is how it is.
The lowest string on a guitar is an E .........
A bass guitar is an octave lower than a guitar, for example the first string on a guitar is an E string that produces an E note when struck, the first string on a four string bass guitar is an E also and when struck also produces an E note, just this note is an octave lower than the guitars
The lowest string is E (this is the thickest one) they then progress, upwards in pitch E A D G B E
from the bottom E-string and just do it backwards
The lowest note on an acoustic guitar is an open E, on the E string. the equivalent note on a bass guitar is the second fret of the D string, or the 7th fret of the A string, or the 12 fret of the E string..
depending on the the individual gauges of the six (6) guitar strings ie: E, A, D, G, B, E, of course the guitar string that is long and loose produces the lowest pitch... A good example of this are the strings on a mandolin or a 'banduria' which has shorter strings compared to the strings on the guitar...because the mandolin/banduria strings are shorter and tighter, it produces higher pitch... "short and tight=higher pitch......long and loose=lower pitch"
Sample Guitar Tab with no notes: E |-----------------------------| (this line signifies the thinnest string on your guitar) B |-----------------------------| G |-----------------------------| D |-----------------------------| A |-----------------------------| E |-----------------------------| (this line singnifies the thickest string on your guitar)
The string which is in the lowest position. The thin E string.
E-------2------------2--------------0-------0----- = Little e string B-----3---3--------3---3----------3---3---3---3-= B string G---4------------2--------------0-------0---------= G string D--------------------------------------------------- = D string A---------------------------------------------------= A string E--------------------------------------------------- = Big E string It is basically upside down, this is how it is.
Top string is the E string jus tune it like any regular E string haha
Clearly a Rocky Horror related question... as in "Wound up like an 'E' or first string." 6-string guitar has a high E string wound up nice and tight.
No, the third string is G. The guitar strings are as follows: 1st: e 2nd: B 3rd: G 4th: D 5th: A 6th: E