Question:

How Do You Restring A Acoustic Guitar?

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I have a estabon acoustic guitar that was given to me and the top e string broke i know how to restring a eletric but not acoustic any help?

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  1. Without typing a lot.  Try one of these sites.

    http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=restrin...


  2. Step by step with pics...

    http://guitar.about.com/od/beginners/ss/...

  3. Man... nice answers, they helped me a lot.

    ;-)

  4. 1.   Decide how to restring. There is much debate about whether it is wise to remove and replace every string individually, or simply to unstring everything and then restring everything. The argument to be made here is that by using the one-at-a-time method, you maintain most of the tension the neck is used to, and therefore keep string tension in balance with truss rod tension. However, because fingerboards accumulate a mix of skin oil, skin and dirt (which saps tone and acoustic sustain from the guitar), removing all the strings at once permits you to clean and wipe the fingerboard without lifting up the strings or having to work around them. The choice is yours as to which method to use.

    2.   Remove the strings. Loosen the strings until they are no longer under tension. Then, either clip them using nippers or continue to loosen them via the tuning machines until they can be pulled out of the tuning pegs. An inexpensive tool called a peg winder, available at any music/guitar shop, is very handy for this.

    3.   Remove the bridge pins. Once your strings have been removed from the headstock, take out the bridge pins. These are the k**b-looking things (usually white or black) that allow the strings to hook themselves onto the inside of the guitar. Bridge pins can be quite stubborn, especially if either they or the guitar is new. Occasionally you may be tempted to grab these from the outside with pliers. While this is acceptable if done with the utmost caution, it is generally not necessary. The best method is to use a bridge pin puller, which comes in all varieties (and therefore prices), and can be purchased at any guitar/music shop. Another method would be to push the pins out from inside the guitar instead. Actually pushing the string further into the guitar as you do this sometimes helps since the end of the string is wound and "wedges" itself in with the peg. Once the pegs pop free you can pull them out of the peg holes. Note: Over time, each peg is grooved by the strings they've been holding. It is very advantageous to keep your pegs laid out in the order they are removed so you can put them back in the same holes from which they were removed.

    4.   Remove the strings from the peg holes.

    5.   Get your new strings ready. Some strings' ball ends are color-coded to indicate what note they are to be tuned to.

    6.   Choose your own order. There are many theories about what order strings should be applied. Some guitarists start at the thin end and work their way up, or start at the thick end and work their way down. Some say it is best to first put in the thinnest string, then the thickest, then alternate to the next-thinnest, then the next-thickest and so on (1, 6, 2, 5, 3, 4). Alternating in this fashion keeps a more even left-to-right pull on the neck of the guitar and makes later tuning less problematic, especially for older guitars.

    7.   Insert the k**b end of the string into the peg hole and re-insert the end peg, all the while holding in the string. It is helpful to pull a little tension on the string toward the head of the guitar. Ultimately this tension is what keeps those pegs from falling out. You'll wish you had 3 hands for this.

    8.   Stretch each string. Once each string is in its peg hole, stretch it up to its appropriate tuning peg and insert the end through the hole in the peg. Keep in mind that you will want to be turning the guitar tuning key ALWAYS TO THE RIGHT to tighten. If the tuning keys on your guitar are on opposite sides of the head (as is usual) you bring the string up between the two rows of key pegs and to the outside.

    9.   Thread the string through the hole and pull tight, but not too tight. You will want to leave just a little bit of slack to have some excess string to wind around the tuning pegs. If you do not, you will run out of string too quickly and the strings will loosen up when you are playing. This is, regrettably, a trial-and-error process and is different for each string. Too much excess string will cause a huge "spool" of wire on your tuning pegs (a bad thing, not just cosmetically) and too little can cause the string to literally come off. Just remember, you can always cut off more if you leave too much. You can never add back what you cut off.

    10.   Bend the string UP (90° perpendicular to the guitar) and turn the tuning key so you get several winds around the peg. This can take a good deal of winding (again, the peg winder is very handy for this part). Make sure that when you tighten the string, that each subsequent wind stacks one below the last, so that none of the winds overlap. This takes a lot of practice to do alone, but it ensures both a cleaner looking wind and a longer life to the string itself, and the guitar itself staying in tune. Do not tighten the string to its usual pitch, but a few semi-tones below. You want it tight enough to hold in place and put enough tension on the bottom peg to not come out again, but now is not yet the time for "tuning".

    11.   Repeat from step 8 with the rest of the strings.

    12.   Tune your guitar now

    13.   Use some wire cutters to snip off excess string, leaving only about 1/8 of an inch (1/2 centimeter) of "stub". Cutting the string too short can make the "stub" end slip back into the spooled string and loosen your strings.

    Warnings: You don't need to remove the pegs from inside the guitar. The peg remover has a semi-circular notch on it that slides under the peg so you can gently pry it out.

    Things You'll Need:

    Wire cutters.

    Guitar strings.

    Guitar peg winder.

    lint free cloth.

    A guitar.

  5. You can have a music store restring it for you

    If you want to do it yourself, then buy a set of strings and use the string you want. Put the end where there is a round piece on it into a hole with plugs(near the soundbox hole). Then, you put the other end onto the hole in the peg area. then, you turn it around several times, and tune it.

  6. First determine if the strings need to be changed. Classical strings don’t break as often as steel strings so you’re going to have to change them when the time comes. You can tell aurally if the strings don’t sound as bright. You can also see a buildup of black marks on the strings.

    Purchase nylon classical guitar strings. Steel strings can damage a classical guitar so never use steel strings. Coated strings sound better but are more expensive. Non-coated strings will sound fine as well if you’re on a budget.

    Get yourself a string winder—much easier than winding and unwinding by hand. Loosen the string that you want to replace. Important: only replace strings one at a time. Don’t remove every string at once as this can potentially warp the fretboard.

    Now, thread the string at the bridge. This is harder than an acoustic guitar where pegs will hold the string in place. Thread the string through the corresponding hole in the bridge and loop it around so it’s tight.

    Thread the string through the tuning head. Thread it through the hole at the roller and loop the slack around the string twice so it is tight—this locks the string in place when you use the string winder to pull the string tight.

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