raising to b tuning
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raising to b tuning
this is the first time i changed to raised b. i already changed the strings. i tuned them to the right notes but it was real low and the strings were somewhat lose. do the strings get real tight if you do it right or are they lose?
- filmdude100cms
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Loose?when I tuned raised B my strings were still tight as hell.. I believe there is a chance you're an octave low.. cause Raised B the strings are still tight and Bari. the strings are loose as shitfilmdude100cms wrote:they are suposed to be a little loose, not too much though.
Shows Been to: 7-17-02, 12-15-03, 7-20-04, 7-5/6-05
well... there are 2 ways to tune to B... low and high... raised b implies they want high which makes ya strings hella tight. low makes em loose and shit. i prefer to capo 

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- filmdude100cms
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- Ranting Thespian
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Same here, and I have an acoustic tuned to raised bfilmdude100cms wrote:mine is in raised b, theyre not too loose, just not as tight as standard. then again, i have raised b on my electric,
Also, if you tune them an octave low . . . isn't that baritone tuning then? Wouldn't your strings just be flopping all over the place, with no tension?
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-Ranting Thespian

-Ranting Thespian
yeah....hmmmmRanting Thespian wrote:Same here, and I have an acoustic tuned to raised bfilmdude100cms wrote:mine is in raised b, theyre not too loose, just not as tight as standard. then again, i have raised b on my electric,
Also, if you tune them an octave low . . . isn't that baritone tuning then? Wouldn't your strings just be flopping all over the place, with no tension?
~Andy (The artist formerly known as praisedave)
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- SpoonInSpoon
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Yeah...acoustic raised B the strings are still extremely tight, tighter then standard, but not too tight to snap 'emRanting Thespian wrote:Same here, and I have an acoustic tuned to raised bfilmdude100cms wrote:mine is in raised b, theyre not too loose, just not as tight as standard. then again, i have raised b on my electric,
Also, if you tune them an octave low . . . isn't that baritone tuning then? Wouldn't your strings just be flopping all over the place, with no tension?
Shows Been to: 7-17-02, 12-15-03, 7-20-04, 7-5/6-05
- filmdude100cms
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ummmm.... reason its called raised b, the strings are raised to a higher pitch, you tuned down to baritone, wich cant be acheived on a standard guitar, (it can with a special tuning that i use, but not with the actual notes)SpoonInSpoon wrote:i tried lower my e and a to b and e for an another thing. they were floppy, but got the effect down. its good with just those two down to do a base line playing with a normally tuned guitar.
you have to do somethinspecial to get them that high though, read the DMBtabs faq.
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to go baritone, you have to have a longer neck scalefilmdude100cms wrote:ummmm.... reason its called raised b, the strings are raised to a higher pitch, you tuned down to baritone, wich cant be acheived on a standard guitar, (it can with a special tuning that i use, but not with the actual notes)SpoonInSpoon wrote:i tried lower my e and a to b and e for an another thing. they were floppy, but got the effect down. its good with just those two down to do a base line playing with a normally tuned guitar.
you have to do somethinspecial to get them that high though, read the DMBtabs faq.
Shows Been to: 7-17-02, 12-15-03, 7-20-04, 7-5/6-05
ideally but not necessarilyDMBFan63 wrote:to go baritone, you have to have a longer neck scalefilmdude100cms wrote:ummmm.... reason its called raised b, the strings are raised to a higher pitch, you tuned down to baritone, wich cant be acheived on a standard guitar, (it can with a special tuning that i use, but not with the actual notes)SpoonInSpoon wrote:i tried lower my e and a to b and e for an another thing. they were floppy, but got the effect down. its good with just those two down to do a base line playing with a normally tuned guitar.
you have to do somethinspecial to get them that high though, read the DMBtabs faq.
~Andy (The artist formerly known as praisedave)
http://www.andymangold.com
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For traditional baritone guitars, the neck scale is longerpraisedave wrote:ideally but not necessarilyDMBFan63 wrote:to go baritone, you have to have a longer neck scalefilmdude100cms wrote:ummmm.... reason its called raised b, the strings are raised to a higher pitch, you tuned down to baritone, wich cant be acheived on a standard guitar, (it can with a special tuning that i use, but not with the actual notes)SpoonInSpoon wrote:i tried lower my e and a to b and e for an another thing. they were floppy, but got the effect down. its good with just those two down to do a base line playing with a normally tuned guitar.
you have to do somethinspecial to get them that high though, read the DMBtabs faq.
Shows Been to: 7-17-02, 12-15-03, 7-20-04, 7-5/6-05
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