grassyknoll
Oud Addict
Posts: 30
Registered: 6-4-2016
Member Is Offline
|
|
Density of supernylgut 1.0? (From Iraqi and other sets circa 2016)
Hi everyone
I'm here trying to dial in a plain nylgut d (3rd) course, and wondered if anyone knew the density of this first iteration of supernylgut 1.0? (The
"super nylgut" released with their set circa 2016) From what I read on oudstrings.com, this formulation sounds different both from new nylgut (NNG -
Aquila lute) and Supernylgut 2.0 - the new iteration now released with their sets
On the art wiklo string calculator it says "old nylgut" has a density of 1260 (rather than 1300 for NNG).. wondering were this Supernylgut 1.0 fits
into this spectrum
Thank you!
Cheers!
|
|
Brian Prunka
Oud Junkie
Posts: 2939
Registered: 1-30-2004
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Member Is Offline
Mood: Stringish
|
|
I'm not sure but I don't think the slight variations in nylgut density from different formulas have a big impact, particularly on the d course.
By the time you get thick enough for the d course, the considerations of tone become more important than precise tension—a thick string will tend to
sound a bit dull and 'flubby.' At least that's been my experience.
How are you getting gauged plain nylgut, though? I don't recall Aquila ever making it available in those sizes.
According to Aquila's equivalency chart for the "lute" nylgut (which is NNG, but the original version), .91NNG is aproximately = 1.00 Nylon or .79
PVF. Depends on your scale length, but generally people use between .97-1.02 for that string if they are using nylon and between .83-.92 if using
PVF.
So that is probably as low as you would go. I'd expect something like 1.00 NNG to be as high as you'd want to go.
If it was me I'd probably start with 0.97, see how it sounds/feels and adjust from there.
|
|