

🎶 Elevate your banjo game with strings that strike the perfect chord every time!
D'Addario EJ55 5-string banjo strings feature medium gauge 9-30 steel strings with a phosphor bronze wound 4th string, delivering a warm, bright, and balanced tone. Designed with loop end construction for universal fit, these strings are crafted in the USA to exacting standards and trusted by professional musicians worldwide.








| ASIN | B00RWCUF40 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #310 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #1 in Banjo Accessories |
| Body Material Type | Steel, Phosphor Bronze |
| Brand Name | D'Addario |
| Coating Description | Uncoated |
| Color | Bronze |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (5,832) |
| Finish Type | Uncoated |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00019954910891 |
| Instrument | Banjo |
| Item Type Name | Banjo |
| Item Weight | 9 Grams |
| Manufacturer | D'Addario &Co. Inc |
| Manufacturer Part Number | EJ55 |
| Material Type | Phosphor Bronze, Steel |
| Model Name | EJ55 |
| Model Number | EJ55 |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Banjo |
| Set Name | EJ55 |
| String Gauge | Medium |
| String Material Type | Phosphor Bronze |
| UPC | 019954910891 |
| Warranty Description | Replaced if defective. |
J**E
Good Strings!
Fit perfectly tuned up good and sounds good too. Wood buy again.
J**P
Great for beginners
Light weight strings are good for beginners and young tender fingers. However, it also produces a lighter thinner sound and does not developed the necessary callous needed for clear noting. Great for starting out to build confidence and finger strength but will need to be replaced with medium strings for callous development and better tone.
D**I
Good strings
I Like these strings for my banjo they work well the quality and sound are worth the purchase.
O**R
Great Strings
I use the Light gauge set strings with the phosphor bronze wound 4th string. On here they're listed as Custom-Light and incorrectly categorized under Nickel even though the 4th string is bronze. I personally do not enjoy nickel wound 4th strings, I find that they do not have that warm tone I love so much. These strings are great, I go through a set about once a month or so and that's playing every day for at least 20-30 minutes. They stay in tune well. I find that this gauge is slightly smaller than the Ernie Ball frailing strings that I've tried which give it just that little extra when it comes to brightness of tone AND clarity that I'm looking for without sounding muted or dead. I play clawhammer style if that matters. In the year and change I've been playing I've only had two strings snap on me and that was while I was restringing the instrument and I was very new to the instrument as a whole which I attribute the snapping more to my lack of experience at the time then to quality of product. It is important when stringing your instrument to press down on your strings occasionally in between tightening them while tuning to help them stretch in a more gentle fashion when getting up to tune instead of just cranking on the tuner until you reach pitch. Tuning them without that small step makes them more likely to break. Think of it as towing a car, you never just leave the rope loose in between vehicles and suddenly accelerate - that will cause the rope to break almost immediately when it comes under tension. You instead take the slack out and gradually increase tension until you're under load and you're off and rolling. TL:DR Best strings I've found so far though I'm always trying new ones just to see what's out there. Have fun!
M**G
I bought two sets, and both had issues with the high D string. The first one broke at the winding near the tailpiece right after stringing it, and the other, this is really weird, seems to have already been put on a banjo, though not wound around the peg, before it was wrapped up and sealed in the package. It was pre-bent right at the tuning peg and bridge. It is a new string, just bent, so it seems someone was just measuring it or something. The bend messed up the flow of the string around the peg, and left a slight bulge. It might possibly affect tuning stability (along with the other half-dozen finicky banjo tuning issues), but it's mostly just a minor cosmetic issue. Otherwise, the strings sound great. I've used D'Addarios for decades on my guitars, they're my favorites, but this is my first/second banjo set from the brand, and the first/second time there's ever been any issue(s).
1**H
Good quality fair price.
Good strings great sound for the price.
C**.
Loop end, light gauge.
Sounds good to me.
M**E
Great sound and durability
I use these on my old Deering Goodtime banjo with the Gumby head. I did not need to make any alterations to the nut or the bridge to make them fit. (Not saying you won’t need to, but I didn’t need to with mine) Awesome sound and very durable, but they do take a while to tune-in due to the amount of stretch that they have. This is not a flaw by any means, it’s absolutely normal for these types of strings. I may have taken a good week or more, until they set. It’s hard to compare these to a metal strings, but if I did, I would say that they hold their sound better in the long run. Metal strings seem to lose the sound after a while, but these things sound just as good now as the day that I put them on months ago. I play in all sorts of tunings and keys. I’ve tuned down low, as well as up to standard A, Double C and D tuning.
M**L
Bien, es lo que buscaba
A**H
meilleures cordes de banjo au son chaleureux
M**O
En general. Para el banjo tenor irlandés se prefiere que la cuerda La (A) sea entorchada (wounded), y en este juego no lo está. Hay que tenerlo en cuenta.
N**Y
Good quality
F**R
Es mi primer juego de cuerdas, hacen sonar excelente un banjo de mediano precio
ترست بايلوت
منذ أسبوعين
منذ 3 أسابيع