Ernie Ball Earthwood Phosphor Bronze Medium (13-56) Acoustic Guitar Strings (P02144)
Ernie Ball Earthwood Phosphor Bronze acoustic guitar strings are produced with an exclusive phosphor bronze wrap wire. Engineered to meet the demands of acoustic musicians worldwide, these concert quality strings provide deep, rich bass notes with clear bright trebles. Ernie Ball Earthwood Phosphor Bronze acoustic guitar strings are played by The Counting Crows, The Edge, and Maroon 5 amongst many other touring musicians. Made with the finest and freshest raw materials, all Ernie Ball strings are hermetically sealed to ensure your strings stay as fresh as the day they were made. Gauges .013 .017 .026 .034 .046 .056. Part number 2144.
Product Features
- Rich Expressive Sound
- Excellent Clarity
- Made in California, U.S.A. Featuring the finest and freshest materials.
- Made from 92% copper, 7.7% tin, 0.3% phosphorus wire
- Element Shield Packaging Prolongs string life and keeps strings as fresh as the day they were made
- Previously packaged as Power Slinky Acoustic
- Packaging may vary from pictured
My New Favorite Strings. By Far. I used to mainly use Elixir PB Nanowebs or Daddario coated or uncoated PBs, but the earthwood pbs really shine on my Gibson & Martin acoustics in an incomparable way.I have like 10 sets of these as backup always. Never changing string brands from now on unless EB changes their formula or I get a new acoustic that demands a different set of strings.From day 1 to day 100, these sound good even though I have very clammy hands. May not work for you, but as for me, these are…
All around disappointing I should start off by saying I REALLY wanted to like these strings. Because, well, I change strings often and these are cheap. When putting them on the B string broke as I was tuning. Luckily I had bought an extra set. No big deal really. The real issue was once I got the strings on. They just sounded dead and lifeless. And they only got worse as the days went on. After about two weeks I couldn’t take it anymore so I took them off and went back to my Elixirs. I’m not exaggerating when…
What beautifully rich sound When my neighbor moved out, he gave me two of his guitars. Both had chased him all over the country and he decided to stick with one guitar instead of having three. The acoustic he gave me is a little (!) Epiphone Dreadnought, the strings of which needed replacement, oh, five years ago. On a lark, I tried out EB Earthwood Lights. Coming from an electric, Earthwood strings on an acoustic deliver a richness I’ve only heard from guitar and amp setups costing far more than this Epi is worth. When…