🎸 Elevate your sound with strings that play as hard as you do!
D'Addario XL Nickel Electric Guitar Strings (EXL120-3D) are a pack of three 6-string sets featuring super light 09-42 gauge nickel-plated steel strings. Engineered with proprietary Hex-Core technology for perfect intonation and consistent feel, these polished, coated strings deliver a bright, versatile tone suitable for all genres. Made in the USA, they combine durability with smooth playability and come with a code to earn Players Circle rewards.
Coating Description | coated |
String Material Type | Nickel Steel |
Finish Types | Polished |
Color | Silver |
String Gauge | Extra Light |
Recommended Uses For Product | Electric Guitar |
T**Y
The Best Electric Guitar Strings
These are the best electric guitar strings, used by almost everyone who doesn't have an endorsement deal with a competitor. Last a long time, sound great and very consistent tone and feel and tuning stability.
F**X
Great value for the money
Constantly using these for clients in our guitar shop if they don't bring them with them when we ask them what they want many many of them say this brand of string they string up great they seem pretty stretched they don't stretch out a lot so they tune quickly and if you keep them clean they last a very long time and they're great value for the money
P**R
It doesn't get any better than D'Addario (from a 30-year player)
I've been playing D'Addario strings for over 30 years now and I've bought hundreds of sets over the years. I've tried many others in the past, but now I just figure why bother, nothing has ever exceeded them, and usually other brands come up short. D'Addario strings never seem to have problems like excessive breakage, old/tarnished strings, or just inferior tone/quality that I have experienced with others. I buy both acoustic and electric strings, and also bass strings, although acoustic is my main instrument.If I have one tip for you, it's this. If you are wondering why you can't get the vintage sound of 70s acoustic guitars or earlier, BUY THE D'ADDARIO 80/20 ACOUSTIC STRINGS. Personally I live for this sound and I consider it the ultimate and most superior tone of tones. If you want the modern acoustic sound (1980s onward), then sure, buy Phosphor Bronze or the coated strings. But those 80/20 D'Addario strings are the holy grail imo.I also consider these strings (EXL140 light top/heavy bottom) to be the pinnacle of electric strings, but honestly, if you play only heavy metal, maybe try the Pro Steels, and if you only play blues, maybe try the Pure Nickel instead of Nickel Wound. But these to me are the Goldilocks strings, perfect, right down the middle, balanced, tough, stay in tune really well. You can't go wrong. The heavy bottom really helps eliminate string buzz and gives a solid strong bass, while the light top allows for great bending and perfect playability.
S**L
Really worth it
The strings are great, not the best, as they are daddario's entry level, but they are really decent for their price, and they deliver. I find this box to be perfect, you can take each string you need really easily, and i really liked the rubber plug it has that keeps them sealed! Very satisfied. Have been re-stringing my guitar with this single box for about 2 years now.
C**E
Review of nickel wound XL .095
For the price you pay, these are fine, but they are just what D'Adarrio says, BRIGHT. If you play a bright guitar like a Telecaster with an all-maple neck, the brightness can be too much. On the other hand, if you want a .095 set, you have few options. Ernie Ball Slinkys are true vintage and hard on your fingers, DR Tite Fits are inconsistent, Curt Mangan strings sound beautiful but string tension is much higher, GHS Nickel Rockers were wonderful but discontinued in .095 size. If you're someone who wallops strings causing them to die prematurely, the extreme brightness of these strings might be a plus. I use 'em because they're 100% consistent and cheap. When they start to go, they mellow out nicely so I guess you could say they have extremely long life.
Y**P
Best-sounding, longest-lasting, best-playing, affordable strings for electric guitar
First off, reviewing guitar strings objectively is extremely difficult. Any new set of strings will generally sound, feel, and play better than any old set of strings. Moreover, changing strings, tuning them, and breaking them in takes enough time that it is practically impossible to get an exact AB comparison across different brands in real-time. You need two otherwise identical guitars with otherwise identical wood, setup, electronics, fret age, etc, and you need to fit them both with new strings of the exact same gauge and type but different brands, in order to really assess the differences between two brands objectively. Which is close to impossible.That said, I personally own four electric guitars, and the studio I work at has about a dozen more. Over the past 15+ years as a musician, sound engineer, and stage hand, I have almost certainly played or recorded well over a hundred. So while I cannot personally swear to have done a scientific head-to-head double-blind test between every brand of strings, I can say a few things pretty categorically. And I have tried a ton of different makes of string, from Ernie Ball to GHS to La Bella to mail-order to store-brand, etc etc. (For bass, I prefer other brands than D'Addario, but that's a seperate review).Sound-wise and playability-wise, these D'Addario Nickel Wounds are great. They have a high-quality, "as-expected" sound for a new guitar string, straight down the middle of how a roundwound nickel string should sound.Longevity is a more-complicated story, and widely misunderstood. First off, here are the things that compromise metal guitar strings, in approximate order or importance:1. Metal fatigue. Over time, bending and vibrating a piece of metal causes it to become more brittle and to develop microscopic cracks. Tension, stretching, and deformation exacerbate this condition, which is why even coated strings that are never played become dull and dead-sounding after a couple months of sitting on a guitar, compared to an identical set sitting in its package. This wears out strings faster if you play them, but also even if you just leave them sitting on your guitar. In my experience, D'Addario strings are among the best, if not the best, in terms of mainstream commercial guitar strings when it comes to staying supple, soft, and flexible.2. Surface oxidization/corrosion. This is where coatings can help. Exposure to air, moisture, skin oils, perspiration, etc has a corroding effect on metal strings. Those black, coppery-smelling stripes that you get on your fretting hand are the product of some kind of chemical breakdown in the alloy your strings are made from, releasing certain minerals from the metal onto your fingers. These effects are often over-stated in the marketing materials of coated-strings: they are real, but they are not usually anywhere close to the first thing that kills a set of strings. The conspicuousness of the symptom (black, dull-looking old strings) is often confused with the effects of metal fatigue, and people sometimes think that if they can keep their strings shiny, they will sound and play like new. Not so. Coatings only help the specific problem of surface corrosion, which can be a real one, but is a minor one for most players who keep their guitars in conditioned spaces and who play with clean hands. After a couple weeks of being installed at tension, even coated strings start to succumb to metal fatigue, and need to be changed even if they have never been played or taken out of the case.3. Physical deformation is the final and most unavoidable symptom. Unless your frets are made of softer metal than your strings (and we should hope that they are not), then playing your guitar inevitably creates "flat spots" on the strings, where they contact the frets. Probably similar at the bridge and nut. These become physical deformities in the string's resonant characteristics, as well as exacerbating metal fatigue and compromising surface integrity at those points, affecting both of the above.Taking all of the above into consideration, and assuming that you want soft, supple nickel strings that won't chew up your frets, I think these are your best overall choice. My one exception might be if you have serious problems related to surface corrosion, due to bodily PH imbalances or outdoor gigs, etc, in which case you might benefit from coated strings. But for most players, the strings are going to wear out from metal fatigue long before corrosion has a real effect on the sound or playability.
A**2
Quality strings
These are a great deal, and quality strings for the money. I've used them for years and will continue.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago