Thanks, @Booli. I searched but only found info for linear C on a tenor. I certainly may have missed it, but I appreciate you sharing the info here.
I will order some to try on the Kinnard baritone, which should be ready a week from Friday. We'll have to see if they arrive in time to be the first set or the second set on that uke! ;-)
Eddie
I'm glad to help. I've ordered different strings from Strings By Mail maybe a half-dozen times in the past 2.5 yrs (to support my S.C.O. as you so aptly named it long ago) and rec'd the items in a week or less. They have flat-rate shipping no matter the size of the order, and usually have these Thomastik in stock when I looked.
If you want the string FULL set (the nylon 'trebles' are nice, and I don't like nylon strings), they come 2 ways:
the CF127 has 3 wound basses and 3 wound trebles like most other classical guitar sets
and
the CF128, which has the same 3 wound basses, but ALSO has a WOUND 3rd string (CF27) and the other two are nylon...
I am speaking of string positions for classical guitar...
Most of the time either set is about $20 or so, but the CF singles run anywhere from $4 to $6 each, but very worth it IMHO, as I detest string-sqeak, both for the sound and the feel.
Also to mention - these are LOOP-end strings like mando or banjo strings, and thus have a LOOP at the bridge-end. and also have like 3" of a red silk over-wrap at BOTH ends.
You can safely cut all that off and for a tied-bridge either tie them on, or what I do is tie a simple overhand knot and then run it through the hole of a 3mm glass bead,
OR for a pin-bridge or slotted bridge all you need is a single overhand knot.
Once you cut it though, you might want to either put a dab of clear nail polish (and let it dry, maybe 20 mins to cure) on the windings at the cut end, or use a match flame to ever-so-slightly melt the nylon core so it covers the end of the windings. A hemostat (some call them 'forceps') is/are helpful here.
The core of this string is not
solid nylon, but nylon
fibers, like a very fine, white silken hair, with MANY strands, and the chrome flat over-windings on top of that.
I've also very carefully installed and remove at least one set of the same 4 strings, on more than a half-dozen ukes (and the full 6-set also on several guitars) for testing purposes, and never had one break on me, despite being abraded by tuners, nut and saddle, but I would not pinch them against the frets, even though I see no dents on the underside of the strings from the frets...
I love these strings and have a good amount of experience with them. Similar strings from Savarez or Hannabach are like $40 per set, which I cannot justify such a cost at this time.
Especially when I was using and very happy with the D'Addario EJ27N or Martin M160 classical guitar strings for that instrument, before I found out about the Thomastik.
Also, the D'Addario EJ27N or Martin M160 which only cost like $5 for the entire set, not PER STRING, can be had at most retail shops and are on display next to the La Bella 2001 sets that cost like $12 here in the local shop where I live...