How can I stop my electric guitar strings from rusting so quickly?
I suffer from hyperhyrdosis which means my hands sweat quite a lot. The problem is that because of this my electric guitar strings seem to rust quite quickly because of this. Is there anything I can do to stop my strings from rusting so easily? Perhaps a spray or solution I can wipe over even after or before use.
10 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
Some alloys are more resistant to rust and corrosion as well. Nickel strings are available and should be quite resistant.
If your fingers appear to be too acidic one must ask the simple but direct question - how is your digestive system? The easiest way to minimise acid at the fingertips is to minimise acid at the other end of your fingers. I too had suffered for years with the 'Pig Pen' acidic rain going on all over my strings. I then discovered through research, as a Martial Artist and Fitness Leader, adjusting the intake of food and beverages to a more alkaline ratio, 60 to 80% Alkaline depending on body type, or liver function. One other reason may indeed be a bio chemical reaction between your fingers, and the materials coating the string, or the material the string is made of. Perhaps you may have a high static electricity field causing a polarity shift that draws moisture and cell salts from your finger tips. Follow the prompts - wash hands and dry thoroughly. Keep an absorbent cloth or hand towel in your kit. After many years of trying and buying, don't bother with adding stuff to your fingers - 'cover and smother' might work for the CIA, but gunk won't work. Get a string cleaning gizmo that slips under and over the strings and run it up and down the neck - its soft on the outside (won't damage the board) and rough on the inside to grab the grunge.
Guitar strings are, to an extent, sacrificial. As in, they're not expected to last too long. When I was gigging often and regularly, they would get changed every other gig. The tone of new strings has that 'twang' that older strings have lost. Pro's change every gig, but they can afford it !
Washing your hands before and even during your play time will help,and keeping the strings dry is also good. I used to play with a guy who would splash French chalk (baby powder to you and me) all over guitar , strings and hands (and us if we were in range!), to lubricate and keep his strings dry.
WD40 is a water repellant, good for spraying on strings after playing, BUT - slip something under your strings, over the fretboard to stop it reaching the wood. It may not be detrimental, but could be seen as mental.
Completely off the wall, you could try surgical gloves that are a good tight fit, for at least part of your practice time.
You can use for example GHS fast fret to clean the strings before and after playing.
This should do the trick...
Also wash your hands before playing. As VarlogRant points out coated strings will be better as well.
When I moved back in with my parents living near a lake after living in a third floor apartment in the city my guitar strings rusted stupidly quickly. You have to remember that the humidity in your region is going to affect your strings. Strings that I could go two months with no rust in my apartment would rust after two weeks living with my parents.
Sealed container, wiping your strings, buying coated strings, these usually work.
Someone I know carries Talcum Powder (I think this might be the same as baby powder?) as part of his electric guitar "kit bag" and is very fastidious about using it to keep his hands dry. So you might try that.
The one and just about only suggestion I have is to use coated strings such as Elixirs. I used to have 'em on my #1 and #2 acoustics, and I liked the feel of them. I never had your problem, so don't know if that's an acceptable solution to you.
I have the same problem you do. If I forget to wipe down anything metal I've sweated on, it rusts/pits/etc.
I experimented with different brands of strings and found that of the uncoated strings, DAddario lasts the longest for me.
Also, Old School Aqua Velva after shave works great to clean up the strings after a session. I sprinkle a little on a lint free cleaning rag and wipe down each string after each playing session. I still have over half the bottle of Aqua Velva left that I bought in roughly 1985. Use it sparingly.
Hope this helps.
put on a new set of strings, and make it a habit to clean the strings after each use. It'll keep dirt from building up and corroding the strings.
I recommend this: thestringcleaner.com
Does anyone use the "eyebrow" trick? Basically just rub your fingertips against your eyebrows, that oil adds a nice slippery feel as you slide across the (mostly e B G) strings.
Admittedly this doesn't prevent rust, but I thought it worth mentioning since it helps the strings feel "less rusty". I've tried Finger-Ease lubricant, and there's no comparison. I know it sounds dumb, but give it a shot you might be surprised.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © freshhoot.com2025 All Rights reserved.