Best guitar strings for Post-punk in E Standard
Ranked by the CYS expert team. Updated 2026-04-20.
For Post-punk in E Standard, the ranked pick is Ernie Ball Power Slinky Cobalt (.011–.048) (.11–.48). It earns the top spot because tagged for e-standard and gauges ideal for e-standard. Below: the full ranking, what real Post-punk players in E Standard are using, and why.
Ranked picks

Power Slinky Cobalt (.011–.048)
Why this one: tagged for e-standard; gauges ideal for e-standard

Regular Slinky Cobalt (.010–.046)
Why this one: tagged for e-standard; gauges ideal for e-standard

Super Slinky Cobalt (.009–.042)
Why this one: tagged for e-standard; gauges ideal for e-standard

Beefy Slinky Cobalt (.011–.054)
Why this one: Cobalt editorial pick (CYS bias)

9410 EMP Coated Nickel-Plated Steel (.010–.046)
Why this one: tagged for e-standard; gauges ideal for e-standard

EXL110 XL Nickel Wound (.010–.046)
Why this one: tagged for e-standard; gauges ideal for e-standard
Post-punk players in E Standard
Why these ranks the way they do
We weight four signals: (1) direct genre + tuning tagging on the string set, (2) gauge fit for the tuning's tension floor, (3) documented artist use in the same genre + tuning, and (4) producer recommendations. Evidence is shown on each card above.
Still exploring?
- Browse every tuning this genre lives in: /genres/post-punk
- Browse every genre that uses this tuning: /tunings/e-standard
Frequently asked questions
What gauge strings for Post-punk in E Standard?
The top-ranked set for Post-punk in E Standard is Ernie Ball Power Slinky Cobalt (.011–.048), in the gauge range .11–.48.
Which artists play Post-punk in E Standard?
Documented Post-punk players in E Standard include Johnny Marr, The Edge.
Can I use standard-tuning strings in E Standard?
You can, but tension drops as you tune down. For E Standard, a heavier set keeps feel and intonation right. See the ranked picks above.
Do coated strings matter for Post-punk?
For gigging and studio work, coated strings last 2–3x longer, which matters whether you play Post-punk or anything else. For pure tone chasing, uncoated is traditional.
How often should I change strings playing Post-punk?
Daily players: every 2–3 weeks. Weekly players: monthly. Tracking in a studio: fresh per session. This is genre-agnostic, Post-punk doesn't change the answer.