DR Strings Pure Blues PHR-10

224

String Set for Guitar

  • Medium
  • Pure nickel
  • Gauges: .010 - .046
Available since July 2002
Item number 156249
Sales Unit 1 piece(s)
Strength of the strings 010 - 046
Strength of the strings 0,010" – 0,046"
Material Nickel
G-String Wound No
125 kr
Including VAT; Excluding kr200 shipping
In stock within 3-4 weeks
In stock within 3-4 weeks

This product is expected back in stock soon and can then be shipped immediately.

Standard Delivery Times
1

224 Customer ratings

4.6 / 5

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sound

quality

95 Reviews

X
Disapointment
Xxlguru 22.11.2018
Take this with a grain of salt while I am talking about set I've got. Not going to return them or ask refund I have just junked them. Your set might be perfect but I am not getting 10 sets to test them out just to form my opinion.
I've got this product for my new Tele. Tele came with 9's and it was feeling to soft.

By stringing the Tele with this strings E1 felt strange. I've felt some unevenness on E1. Like ribs on the surface. B and G strings felt normal.
During stretching E1 broke. It broke by the end ball . Sure it might be normal place to brake in some guitars but this was in Tele.
I Could not even find original ball end so I have taken one from the string that came with Tele. I've twisted end of a string around that ball and soldered twisted part so id can't unwind. Re stringed E1 again.
Stretched it and start playing it. First bend and it broke again. This time just above bridge pickup. It did not touch anything.

Positive:
Sound was kind of dark. Way darker than strings that came with the Tele. This is not bad considering that Telecasters can be to bright. So I guess this strings if they pass QC might be good for Fender single coil vintage alike guitar tones.

Negatives:

Broke twice before giving me a minute of play time. Broke on different places to. So no Idea why.
Ruff feeling on E1 but I bet that that comes from string being faulty.

This strings might be good for someone but I am not getting them and not recommending them to anyone I know.

I went back to guitar once more and I've checked saddles and nut and what ever I could. Everything is smooth and there is no reason for this strings to brake. Not on the guitar.

I've re stringed the Tele back then with other brands tens and even now they are sounding good and have not changed a bit.

There fore I can't recommend DR string to anyone. Sorry
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P
Best strings for electric?
Peter4567 26.09.2020
These sound great! Play great!
And I havent as for today had a single badly produced string.
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K
Pure Blues-pure quality
K.Kay 29.01.2020
I was always an Ernie ball fan although I tried a lot of brands in the past. A friend of mine was using DR’s he suggested me to try these babies.
Well I have to say I was blown away with the sound of these strings, the clarity even with mushier distortion tones was unbelievable. My guitar was sounded warmer with more harmonic overtones jumping out in every chord and greater string definition when soloing.
My only complaint is the price as these babies are way more expensive than the Ernie ball, so 5 sets of DR’s cost like 6 sets of EB’s.
Personally now I use both brands EB’s for rehearsing and bedroom play, DR’s for recording.
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mh
the vintage sound of blues
mr haze 28.09.2017
Before the late 60's, pure nickel was the only option available for guitar strings. It gives a more vintage sound which is ideal for blues, jazz, soul and early rock'n roll. The feel is a little sloppier so you can choose the next size of strings for a fuller sound or stay with what you had an experiment easier string bends. Note that you will have to adjust your treble settings on your amp because they are less bright than modern strings, so you have to compensate to cut thru the general mix in a band. Will give you a warmer sound easily.
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