5-String Bass and Drop B

gixxsta04

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Nov 27, 2010
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Bought a Carvin B5 yesterday and I need to set it up so I can mimic a Drop B guitar with it. How should I go about this? It has EB Power Slinky's on it. Is it safe to tune the bottom 4 strings up with 50-135's on it or should I go for smaller strings and keep the 135 top?
 
It's hard to imagine it wouldn't be just as easy to transpose (like Tommy said) but to do what you want those strings are way too heavy IMO. I'd use something like this. Certainly nothing heavier than 45-130.
 
I have a lot of fast hammer on riffs that use the open note like this:

C#--------------------
G#--------------------
E --------------------
B -0-2-3-0-3-5-0-5-7-
F#--------------------
B --------------------
H H H H H H


C#--------------------
G#--------------------
E --------------------
B ----------0-3-5-7-
F#-0-3-5-7-----------
B --------------------
H H H H H H



I'm a shitty guitar player so I have to use a lot of open notes and hammer ons to speed up my riffs. It's reasons like that I'd rather not transpose.
 
AFAK the lowest string on a 5-string IS b. So you only have to translate your guitar riffing to the higher strings. I think its 2 steps higher on the other strings...

I know that the top string is a B. That is why I bought a 5er. What didn't register is the fact that I'd have to tune the lower 4 strings UP to acheive Drop B tuning. I think its still a better route than modifying a 4 string to fit a 135 set. Do you see why transposing with open notes on the 1-4 strings would make things difficult? There are some situations where I could never get to that note fast enough in BEAD tuning.
 
I do this with my 5-string. I use a 45 set. You will NEED to re-setup your bass as the tension from the bottom 4 strings being tuned higher than normal will put extra pull on the neck.
 
I'd stick with the .135 for the B string (I prefer the feel of a .130 myself for a Warwick B).

I love Ken Smith Rockmaster strings, they sound and feel good, last ages, and are cheap ($20)! You could go a 4 string set for the higher 4 strings, such as the SM-XL Slap Master-Extra Light, which is .040, .060, .075, .095....that's about a .005-.010 drop overall from standard, which should probably work for (B)-F#-B-E-A. There's lighter ones too, also the same in 5 string sets, but those have a .120 which is a bit too loose for a B imo.

http://www.kensmithbasses.com/Strings/stainlessteel.html

http://www.kensmithbasses.com/Strings/stainlessteelmulti.html
 
I do this with my 5-string. I use a 45 set. You will NEED to re-setup your bass as the tension from the bottom 4 strings being tuned higher than normal will put extra pull on the neck.

I'd stick with the .135 for the B string (I prefer the feel of a .130 myself for a Warwick B).

I love Ken Smith Rockmaster strings, they sound and feel good, last ages, and are cheap ($20)! You could go a 4 string set for the higher 4 strings, such as the SM-XL Slap Master-Extra Light, which is .040, .060, .075, .095....that's about a .005-.010 drop overall from standard, which should probably work for (B)-F#-B-E-A. There's lighter ones too, also the same in 5 string sets, but those have a .120 which is a bit too loose for a B imo.

http://www.kensmithbasses.com/Strings/stainlessteel.html

Thanks guys, I'm glad someone understands what I'm going for here. I might get a 4 string set of super or extra slinkys and run a 135 top. I wish I could find a tension calculator for bass so I could figure out what sizes I would need to retain standard tension.

http://www.kensmithbasses.com/Strings/stainlessteelmulti.html

Thanks guys, I'm glad someone understands what I'm going for here. I might get a 4 string set of super or extra slinkys and run a 135 top. I wish I could find a tension calculator for bass so I could figure out what sizes I would need to retain standard tension.