Jimi75 said:
Ever watched a professional guitar tech? Maybe had the chance to take a glance at one at a concert?
He takes a side cutter, cut through all 6 strings and there he goes!
One important point is that each and every instrument, even when coming out of mass production has its own life - what is good for one guitar is not automatically good for another. The more you experiment with your instrument the more you know how to "treat" it.
Yes, Jimi, you are right, on both counts! But a manufacturer isn't going to
tell anyone to change strings in that manner, they will want the instrument handled gently, if for no other reason than to prevent warranty issues from arising. Also, very good point you make about every instrument having its own life span. My fathers Fender Musicmaster has all the battle scars you would expect for a 50 yr old guitar, yet still plays great. I, however bought a Strat in the early 70's and within 6 mos. the neck was twisted like a dam# corkscrew! No amount of care changing string would've made a bit of difference, the maple neck was bad.
If you get a good one, you're
not gonna hurt it by removing all the strings, cleaning it up, restringing it, retuning, etc. I agree.
What I was getting at in my first post is,
Fender's not gonna say do it that way.
I personally never (and would never) leave 3 strings on at a time and change the other 3.