Aquila Banjo Strings

Aquila Banjo Strings

IMPORTANT INSTALLATION INFORMATION:  Nylgut is a completely different material than Nylon and needs a bit of extra care during installation because of its soft surface and different molecular structure.  First check that the string channels in the nut are rounded and have no sharp edges, especially the lower edges facing the fingerboard. Because the string approaches from a slightly downward angle, if that edge is sharp the string can hang up on it, create a burr and break. It needs to be just slightly radiused, and this procedure can be done with very fine sand paper and an old string, or a small round file. Some makers ignore this because Nylon strings are very hard and can withstand a poor set up. Sometimes bridge saddle edges on the tying side are sharp as well and should be radiused slightly with fine sandpaper.

It is good to help the strings over the nut by lifting them slightly right at the nut as you tune up. Plain Nylgut trebles stretch like crazy so you should also cinch the strings up tight on the barrels before winding. Be sure not to overlap wound strings on the tuning barrels. The preferred method is to put a set on an instrument in the evening, bring them just up to pitch, let them sit overnight, and finish tuning in the morning. This allows the molecules some time to adjust to being stretched. Give them a week or so to stretch in fully (less for ukulele strings) before passing any judgment on tone as it takes a while for them to develop their best sound.

Banjos historically were strung with gut strings. In the middle of the last century, nylon and various metals came into use and favor, because of their consistency of tone and lower cost. Aquila developed the Nylgut strings to combine the best qualities of gut and these modern materials. These new strings have the warmth and brilliance of gut strings but with the stability, longevity and lower cost of modern strings. As they experience the great banjo sounds of players of past centuries, banjo players today have expressed their enthusiasm for these innovative strings.

Aquila Classic banjo sets have four Nylgut plain strings and one wound string, all with plain ends (neither loop or ball). They are tuned DBGDG and are available in light or medium gauge. The minstrel banjo set was developed for the Briggs DGDF#A tuning only.  Remember that Nylgut strings require that the nut and bridge have smooth surfaces. You can ensure this by using very fine sandpaper (600) or steel wool (000).  These strings take a while to set for the best tone. If you need to stabilize intonation faster, Aquila recommends the following – hold one string at a time half way down its length and pull it to one side, then tune the string again. Continue this until tuning is not required after a pull.

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