Excel vs. Emmons string spacing
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Lynn Kasdorf
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Excel vs. Emmons string spacing
I've heard that the Excel guitars have a tighter string spacing than "normal" for a PSG.
I play an Emmons SKH and I measure .342" (8.62mm) center to center string spacing. For 10 strings, this is about 3.078"(77.58mm) center to center.
Can one of you Excel owners take a string spacing measurement for me please? And if is is tighter, did you find it hard to play after coming from a more standard PSG?
...edit...
I just went to Greg Cutshaw's review of his Excel S12 (thanks Greg!) and he says "string spacing is 3.37" - I assume this is a caliper across all 12 strings. Divided by 11, that gives a string-to-string spacing of .306". Yikes- that is .035" (.889mm) tighter..That seems like a large difference.
I wonder if the Williams has a wider spacing, more like an Emmons?
If I end up getting an Excel, I'll still want to use one of my Emonnses as a practice rig.
I play an Emmons SKH and I measure .342" (8.62mm) center to center string spacing. For 10 strings, this is about 3.078"(77.58mm) center to center.
Can one of you Excel owners take a string spacing measurement for me please? And if is is tighter, did you find it hard to play after coming from a more standard PSG?
...edit...
I just went to Greg Cutshaw's review of his Excel S12 (thanks Greg!) and he says "string spacing is 3.37" - I assume this is a caliper across all 12 strings. Divided by 11, that gives a string-to-string spacing of .306". Yikes- that is .035" (.889mm) tighter..That seems like a large difference.
I wonder if the Williams has a wider spacing, more like an Emmons?
If I end up getting an Excel, I'll still want to use one of my Emonnses as a practice rig.
Last edited by Lynn Kasdorf on 23 Aug 2021 10:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Ian Rae
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My Excel S12 measures 3.75" and if you divide that by 11 it's .340 - this is close to the traditional 11/32"
My Williams is tighter - 3.6" divided by 11 is .327 - it takes a little getting used to but it's my practice guitar. When I gig on the Excel it feels really free!
My Williams is tighter - 3.6" divided by 11 is .327 - it takes a little getting used to but it's my practice guitar. When I gig on the Excel it feels really free!
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Oliver Samland
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Hi Lynn,
I have an Emmons P/P D-10 and an Excel S-10. The string spacing differences are no problem to adjust to, in fact I never actually think about it when switching steels. (Pedal/lever action between the clunky old P/P and the very light & smooth running Excel is a different story, though.)
I can measure the Excel's string spacing when I get home.
Ollie
P.S. Spinal disk spacing is noticeably tighter when carrying the Emmons.
I have an Emmons P/P D-10 and an Excel S-10. The string spacing differences are no problem to adjust to, in fact I never actually think about it when switching steels. (Pedal/lever action between the clunky old P/P and the very light & smooth running Excel is a different story, though.)
I can measure the Excel's string spacing when I get home.
Ollie
P.S. Spinal disk spacing is noticeably tighter when carrying the Emmons.
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David Ball
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Lynn Kasdorf
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I see- that makes sense. I guess Mitsuo is always trying things.David Ball wrote:Although I don't own an Excel right now, I've had several in the past. The newer ones had spacing pretty close to Emmons, but the older ones were noticeably narrower. I think that the reputation Excel has for narrow string spacing probably comes largely from the older guitars.
Dave
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Ian Rae
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Mitsuo will know perfectly well what the conventional spacing is. I daresay he has experimented with something narrower in the past. Mine is a 2017 model and is near enough to 11/32"
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I tried playing one many, many years ago. The strings, in my opinion, were way too close to each other.David Ball wrote:Although I don't own an Excel right now, I've had several in the past. The newer ones had spacing pretty close to Emmons, but the older ones were noticeably narrower. I think that the reputation Excel has for narrow string spacing probably comes largely from the older guitars.
Dave
~Lee
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David Ball
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That's why I sold my first one--great guitar, but I couldn't play it. The last one I had, a fairly recent Superb 12 string, played great. Spacing was much better than that first one.Lee Baucum wrote:
I tried playing one many, many years ago. The strings, in my opinion, were way too close to each other.
~Lee
Dave
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Oliver Samland
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The string spacing on my Excel is not equaly spaced. I measured 0.330 (!) on the changer and 0.271 (!!) on the nut.
These values came as a surprise as it actually is quite a difference compared to the Emmons..
Well Lynn, Germans are not particularly well known for being sensitive, I guess I'm no exception.
Please note: my well beloved Excel was build in the 80's, so although it shares a lot of features with Mitsuo's recent builds already, it is an older model.
Ollie
These values came as a surprise as it actually is quite a difference compared to the Emmons..
Well Lynn, Germans are not particularly well known for being sensitive, I guess I'm no exception.
Please note: my well beloved Excel was build in the 80's, so although it shares a lot of features with Mitsuo's recent builds already, it is an older model.
Ollie
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John McClung
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I played an SD12 PedalMaster briefly and its string spacing of the nut at the keyhead was just slightly less than at the changer bridge, definitely a noticeable difference from most other steels, and I wound up really loving that, made hammer ons and pull offs at fret 0 super easy!
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Ian Rae
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Most steels taper towards the nut. I have never come across a practical explanation, so I assume it's aesthetic. The only meaningful place to measure the spacing is at the bridge. Of course the place at which you pick is what counts, but that varies.
Last edited by Ian Rae on 25 Aug 2021 9:43 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Lynn Kasdorf
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Wow- I never realized that! I just measured my Emmons SKH and it is 2.53" at the nut and 3.05" at the bridge- basically a 1/2" difference! I wonder why this is done, and if all PSGs taper like this? Aesthetics? Maybe...Ian Rae wrote:Most steels taper towards the neck. I have never come across a practical explanation, so I assume it's aesthetic. The only meaningful place to measure the spacing is at the bridge. Of course the place at which you pick is what counts, but that varies.
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Dave Mudgett
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I'm gonna somewhat disagree there, because string spacing down the neck toward the nut affects the ease of slanting the bar. So maybe it doesn't matter if you never slant. But some pedal steel players do slant the bar, including me.The only meaningful place to measure the spacing is at the bridge. Of course the place at which you pick is what counts, but that varies.
If you're planning to buy a new guitar, I suggest you communicate directly with the builders to find out what your options are relative to string spacing, straight from the horse's mouth, rather than rely on information here. Or if you go used, I'd ask the seller to measure the spacing at nut and bridge. From what I'm reading here, it sounds like these parameters vary some.
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Ian Rae
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I'm a non-slanter (except for fine tuning) so what Dave says hadn't occurred to me. If you're going to do serious non-pedal-type slants then clearly the less taper the better.
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Chris Templeton
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I'm guessing Mitsuo was thinking about Japanese hand size when deciding on string spacing.


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John McClung
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Does string spacing going narrow at the nut introduce subtle tuning issues? Isn't string length on outer strings a smidgen longer than the middle strings?
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Chris Templeton
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Interesting point , John.
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Chris Templeton
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But does it divide the strings evenly? Whatever the case, it's not noticeable.
When I recorded my "Lakehouse Waltz" around '89, (I'll put it on Soundcloud when I can. Sign in issues). I was so nervous that after changing strings, before the session, I tugged a little too hard when "seating" the strings, I put thin spots in some of the strings and playing three string grips was out of tune and the bar didn't line up with the frets. I had to play mostly single notes or two with a minuscule slant.
At one point, Buddy looked at me with "the look" and said, "have you thought about switching to decaf?".
We recorded it at Bobbe Seymore's studio with Skip engineering.
When I change strings now, I don't tug so hard.
I still don't drink decaf.
When I recorded my "Lakehouse Waltz" around '89, (I'll put it on Soundcloud when I can. Sign in issues). I was so nervous that after changing strings, before the session, I tugged a little too hard when "seating" the strings, I put thin spots in some of the strings and playing three string grips was out of tune and the bar didn't line up with the frets. I had to play mostly single notes or two with a minuscule slant.
At one point, Buddy looked at me with "the look" and said, "have you thought about switching to decaf?".
We recorded it at Bobbe Seymore's studio with Skip engineering.
When I change strings now, I don't tug so hard.
I still don't drink decaf.
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Dave Mudgett
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Ian is absolutely correct - the string length is divided in the same ratio, from string to string. There is no theoretical pitch discrepency. There are pitch discrepancies from different deviations from the "ideal string model" for strings of different pitch and gauge. But not from the different angles and string lengths made due to going from a narrower nut to a wider bridge.
However, narrower string spacing does make string-to-string pitch accuracy more sensitive to bar angle errors. This is a byproduct of the same issue that makes slanting easier with wider string spacing.
I would absolutely prefer a steel guitar with consistent string spacing all the way up and down the neck. I believe the narrower nut is a holdover from Spanish guitar design. On a guitar, narrower spacing at the nut offsets the larger fret spacing "down the neck", and makes it easier to grab chords there. But I can't really see any advantage for steel.
However, narrower string spacing does make string-to-string pitch accuracy more sensitive to bar angle errors. This is a byproduct of the same issue that makes slanting easier with wider string spacing.
I would absolutely prefer a steel guitar with consistent string spacing all the way up and down the neck. I believe the narrower nut is a holdover from Spanish guitar design. On a guitar, narrower spacing at the nut offsets the larger fret spacing "down the neck", and makes it easier to grab chords there. But I can't really see any advantage for steel.
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Chris Templeton
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I'm with you on that, Dave.
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