Hey back to you Mr. Jeff!  Glad to hear it;  did you get the tunebooks I 
emailed you about?  

For anyone else who's interested: Jeff asked about an HG tunebook, so I put 
together a small file of some of the SCA songs me & Anwyn play together.   
Available for free download at the Player's Corner part of our website; here's 
the direct link:    http://altarwind.com/hgmusic.htm

Have a beautiful day
George

  From: Jeffery mayott 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2012 6:27 PM
  Subject: Re: [HG-new] Digest for [email protected] - 8 Messages in 
2 Topics


  hey there  george  just a shout  to say hi  !  I am  doing welll   and 
playing   a way   

  From: George Leverett-Altarwind Hurdy Gurdies 
  Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2012 1:21 PM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: Re: [HG-new] Digest for [email protected] - 8 Messages in 
2 Topics

  Hi Belinda:
  Nice to see you on the forum.   Generally speaking, the following strings 
work pretty well for the Bourdons:

  Petit Bourdon - tuned to c3 or d3: a cello 'G' string works nicely  (standard 
cello size)

  Gros Bourdon - tune to G2 - a 3/4 size cello 'C' string.

  These work pretty well if your drones are around 15 to 15 & 1/2" length.  If 
the vibrating lengths of your drones are significantly different, post them to 
this list and I'm sure you'll find some great advice for replacements.

  Most of us makers sell replacement strings of the sizes needed for these 
instruments, but often you can find cello strings at your local music store as 
well.  If you go this route, be sure that they have either a gut or synthetic 
core (steel core cello strings could over tension the instrument, depending on 
it's design)

  I hope this helps
  Cheers
  George


  ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Belinda Daughtry 
    To: [email protected] 
    Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2012 5:16 AM
    Subject: Re: [HG-new] Digest for [email protected] - 8 Messages 
in 2 Topics

    Thank you all for the wonderful information.  I'm interested in the Nylgut 
for the bourdons and the mouche.  We have such humidity extremes where I live 
(either very humid or very dry) that I have trouble keeping those strings in 
particular in tune.  However, I think I'd like to keep the high chanter and 
trompette with gut.
    I'm not sure about the size of the bourdons.  They're Savarez BFA 442 & 
1002.  Is that their size as well?  They're wound gut.

    Belinda



    On Jun 16, 2012, at 3:27 AM, [email protected] wrote:


        Today's Topic Summary
      Group: http://groups.google.com/group/hurdygurdy/topics

        a.. strings [7 Updates] 
        b.. Strings [1 Update] 
       strings
        "Andy Carter " <[email protected]> Jun 15 02:04PM  

        I have a D trompette from there. Its works, its lasting, it sounds 
good, it wasn't the cheapest but I'm happy with it!
         
        Andy
        Sent from my Nokia phone



        Ruth Bramley <[email protected]> Jun 15 06:57PM +0100  

        I've had strings from NRI and, as Andy says, they're not cheap, but 
they are good quality. I confess that I don't often change strings...
         
        Ruthie
         
        On 14/06/2012 23:04, [email protected] wrote:
         
        Thanks, Paul, that is indeed the company I was trying to think of. Do 
you have any experience with their gut hurdy gurdy strings?
         
        Mitch Gordon
         
        In a message dated 6/14/2012 2:55:40 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes:
         
        I suspect the UK company referred to could be NRI (Manchester).
         
        http://www.nrinstruments.demon.co.uk/
         
        Paul
         
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        DEREK LOFTHOUSE <[email protected]> Jun 15 12:10PM -0600  

        was going to stay out of this, buts Ruth's comment that she doesnt 
often change strings is the perfect lead in.
        I don't know where I picked this up, but apparently gut strings do 
degrade over time, something to do with the oil
        they are treated with. Therefore, you dont want to sit on spare strings 
for too long, at most a year or so. If you change strings yearly, using your 
spare set, you should be okay. Of course this could just be a rumour the gut 
string makers started to sell more strings, who knows.
        I havent used gut for about 7 - 8 years, i use wound metal violin and 
viola strings and change them at least yearly.
         
        Derek
         
        ----- Original Message -----
        From: "Ruth Bramley" <[email protected]>
        To: [email protected]
        Sent: Friday, June 15, 2012 11:57:32 AM
        Subject: Re: [HG-new] re: strings
         
        I've had strings from NRI and, as Andy says, they're not cheap , but 
they are good quality.  I confess that I don't often change strings... 
         
        Ruthie 
         
        On 14/06/2012 23:04, [email protected] wrote: 
         
         
        Thanks, Paul, that is indeed the company I was trying to think of. Do 
you have any experience with their gut hurdy gurdy strings? 
          
        Mitch Gordon 
          
          
          
         
        In a message dated 6/14/2012 2:55:40 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes: 
         
        I suspect the UK company referred to could be NRI (Manchester). 
        http://www.nrinstruments.demon.co.uk/ 
        Paul 
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        Martin Lodahl <[email protected]> Jun 15 12:10PM -0700  

        On 06/15/2012 11:10 AM, DEREK LOFTHOUSE wrote:
        > I don't know where I picked this up, but apparently gut strings do 
degrade over time, something to do with the oil
        > they are treated with. Therefore, you dont want to sit on spare 
strings for too long, at most a year or so. If you change strings yearly, using 
your spare set, you should be okay. Of course this could just be a rumour the 
gut string makers started to sell more strings, who knows.
        > I havent used gut for about 7 - 8 years, i use wound metal violin and 
viola strings and change them at least yearly.
         
        I'm something of an extreme case in that department. In general, I 
        change my strings when they break, and sometimes not even then. On a 
        viola da gamba I had a top d break right at the tailpiece a month or so 
        ago, and just tied a new base knot in it and refitted the same string. 
        A couple of years ago I replaced all the strings on that instrument, 
        realizing as I did so that I'd last replaced the bottom three strings 
in 
        1977. I have to say that the sound improved dramatically; using the 
        same gut string for 30+ years has no virtue beyond thrift. But I still 
        can't bring myself to discard a usable string.
         
        Decades ago I used to play with a classical guitarist who changed her 
        strings weekly.
         
        - Martin
         
        -- 
        Martin Lodahl of Auburn, California
        UNIX Pro, Musician, Motorcyclist



        Paul Sherwood <[email protected]> Jun 15 10:54PM +0100  

        Yes, they were fine, but I haven't used them for a while (not because
        I found a better supplier, but because I tend to use artificial
        strings now, like Corelli Crystal and nylgut).
         
        Paul
         



        [email protected] Jun 15 06:27PM -0400  

        Never heard of Nylgut before. What strings do you use them for 
(trompette? 
        high chanter?), and how do you order appropriate sizes for gurdy? I 
already 
        know about Corelli Crystal violin strings, as I use one for the low d 
        chanter on my d/g. I have to say, though, for other chanter pitches and 
for the 
        trompette, it would be hard to sell me on anything other than gut 
strings. 
        It's hard enough to pry me away from Savarez gut strings...

        Mitch




        In a message dated 6/15/2012 2:54:38 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
        [email protected] writes:
         
        Yes, they were fine, but I haven't used them for a while (not because
        I found a better supplier, but because I tend to use artificial
        strings now, like Corelli Crystal and nylgut).
         
        Paul
         
        > For more options, visit this group at
        > http://groups.google.com/group/hurdygurdy
         
        > The rules of posting, courtesy, and other list information may be 
found 
        at
        > http://hurdygurdy.com/mailinglist/index.htm. To reduce spam, posts 
from 
        new
        > subscribers are held pending approval by the webmaster.
         
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        Augusto de Ornellas Abreu <[email protected]> Jun 15 07:46PM 
-0300  

        Try Corelli Crystal VIOLA strings. With a full string set, you can get 
low
        G and high G (if you play octave G on a G/C gurdy) and low D and high D 
(on
        a normal D/G gurdy). I use this set on my gurdy and they are quite good,
        and really cheap.
         
        Augusto
         



       Strings
        Martin Lodahl <[email protected]> Jun 15 12:01PM -0700  

        On 06/14/2012 07:35 AM, Melvin Dorries wrote:
        > They are manufactured in the USA and are of very good quality.
        > You may find sets here on one of our web pages: 
        > http://hurdygurdycrafters.com/index.asp?page=parts1.2
         
        I haven't tried Mel's strings, but if he carries them, I'd trust them. 
        For some years now I've been happy with gut strings from Dan Larson in 
        Minnesota: http://gamutmusic.squarespace.com/. Depending on the 
        mission and diameter, I've used treble gut, Lyon gut and Pistoy gut, 
        though the last takes a little extra effort to keep the cotton on. If 
        like my brother-in-law you just automatically recotton every time the 
        instrument comes out of the case, this won't bother you. The one 
        exception is for the high d chanter on both my instrument and my 
wife's, 
        a Neil Brook "Wonder String" lives up to its billing altogether. Mine 
        had always been fussy about strings up there and had worked best with 
        gut strings of smaller than normal diameter, which tended to have short 
        lives. Hers had just been impossible. This string solved the problems 
        with both.
         
        - Martin
         
        -- 
        Martin Lodahl of Auburn, California
        UNIX Pro, Musician, Motorcyclist



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