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I think for one thing tuning a guitar in 5ths can pose some real hand stretch issues, and requiring more scale fingerings that required position shifting or tortuous 4 note per string sacle fingerings, and some serious chord restructuring, but it would be interesting to try. I've been borrowing an Octave mandolin which is more bouzouki or cello-like in scale length and harder to finger scales than a mandolin is for me. I'd try it on a telecaster or non trem guitar, maybe one of those weird Zack Wylde string sets that go from 10 to 60. I recently put a baritone conversion neck on a Franken strat I've had for years. I recently got an Allparts neck which is 27.78, I can use a fairly normal set electric medium 13-56 and its usually tuned starting on B, thought I do lower it for A based alternate tunings. It sounds killer fat for slide guitar and great for big fat open chords. I have a thing called a tremel-no in place of one of my trem springs that allows me to fix the bridge, very handy when moving to alternated tunings and not wanting to spend hours retuning because of the floating bridge. I had a warmouth bari neck on this guitar before hand but it was an even longer scale length and required a more specialized string gauge. This All parts neck is easier to play. Bill -----Original Message----- From: Per Boysen [mailto:perboysen@gmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, February 24, 2009 2:13 PM To: loopers-delight Subject: Tuning guitar in fifths for wider orchestration options Anyone here on the list having tried tuning a guitar in fifths for wider orchestration options? Or even wider intervals? Would make sense when looping to get lower bass and higher highs. I guess you have to pick a custom string set for this. Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se www.perboysen.com