Generally all the strings I use on my 58.5 ouds are designed for Turkish ouds and Turkish tuning, namely 58.5 cm with dd for the first nylon string.
Those sets should excert medium tension on ouds if tuned according to Turkish scale. I use the same strings tuned to CC cc which gives me a lower
tension, somthing defnately less that 3.5 per string. This tension could be insufficient for many players (I was one), but i have noticed that the
difference in sound is not really big, could be even nicer in some cases, playability is a bit different, but anyone could get used to it after 15
minutes of practice.
This insures that the oud is always on lower tension, the thing that might extend oud life and preserves the action unchaged. At the end of the day,
well-built ouds will give great sounds even with poor quality and poor tension strings.
I have lately used Daddario on my Abu Alaa's oud. Prior to that I used Pyramid lute and i literally HATED that oud and put it here in the forum for
sale and I was ready to give it away for 65% of what i paid for that oud. Now, even if I get double what I asked for, I wouldn't give it away. It
sounds undescribably nice, although the strings tension is much lower and the strings quality as well.
The wisdom is: try as many string types as you can, start with lower tension upwards. It worked fine with me.
I had Exactly same experience with 60 cm string length, Daniel Mari, one of the cheepest strings types and rather lower tension, worked the BEST on
big ouds.
I hope that this tip could help you guys. You cannot imagine how much money I spent experimenting different strings types and tension ranges.
Expensive custom made string are not always the solution. |