<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"><tr><td class="SmallText"><b>heyjoe73 wrote on Fri, 15 December 2006 19:52</b></td></tr><tr><td class="quote">
Your post doesnt say wether you play acoustic or electric,
If its an electric guitar you have, then the most used guage is 10s. However, they may or may not be the right ones for you. It all depends on a few things, if you are looking to play as fast as possible ove the fretboard, then smaller strings may be better, down to 8 guage,
As for what make of strings to buy, I've played for 20+ years and have tried all sorts, and to be honest, most of them sound fairly similar, I'd suggest trying different makes for a while, to see what you like, then stick with them.
As the previous poster said, if you can, ask someone experienced to restring the guitar for you.
Hope this helps.
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Heyjoe73 has some valid and useful advise, although your playing style will also affect the gauge of strings you use. If you have a heavy hand (strum really hard and fast) a set of extra lite strings are gonna break quick (# 8's). If you do alot of bends (eric claptonish style a set of light's (9's) will work better than mediums (10's). if you play metal with heavy rythyms then use the mediums (10's). If you gig or practice every night and try the heavy's (12's) your probley a sadist and like pain. String make and gauge is a preference, it may come down to what is affordable to you. (I buy strings by the ten's usually on sale at the guitar center Dr's, GHS boomers, Dean Markley or D'darrios in 9 or 10 gauge). Once you become more experienced you'll differenciate the tonal life of the brand of strings you chose. (which ones tone last the longest.
Good luck.
Bootleger