www.allinstruments.com is proud to present 'How to replace a classical guitar string' starring one of our technicians Mr Dominic Allan! We are a family run music shop based in Westbury, Wiltshire. We sell, restore, repair and teach 'all instruments' from pianos to bagpipes! We strive to have 'all instruments' in store and have a wide range in our online shop www.allinstruments.com We hope that you find our videos useful, if you have any suggestions for future videos please get in touch!
@ghaibboy its a spanish guitar
madeinchina77 1 week ago
Thanks a lot for sharing.. Anyways what guitar is that? Looks cool
ghaibboy 5 months ago
thanks^^
lumyingluo 6 months ago
@animator96 cog, not cock. A cog is a gear.
skillfulbeast 11 months ago
I would probably have liked this if I could have seen it. The camera was not only blurry, but not even on directed on the key parts I needed to see, such as the beginning, threading the string in to the next string, and then at the peg, the most important part - the beginning point of winding the string to tension. I wish this could be redone.
Marlana74 1 year ago
Oil it!..
There, there ,there.. n a bit on the cock there..
wtf?
animator96 1 year ago
What type of classical is that?
xIwillNotBeSilenced 1 year ago
same guitar! hahaha helped alot
cuswco97 1 year ago
I need some help with tuning my E string!!! Yesterday I opened my guitar case after not having played for a couple of years. I tried to tune the guitar, but I could not get the high note in the E-string. It kept on sounding like the second string. SoI tightened the string more to get a higher note, but It snapped! So I went to the store to buy new strings. Again the same case. How do I get the high note in my E-string??? I hope someone can help me...
hebikniet123 1 year ago
tuning the strings a semitone sharp would put the tuning in f, not f sharp. tuning them a tone sharp would put it in f#. great vid though.
skyvorpal 1 year ago