T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3120.1 | solid as a rock! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue Oct 03 1995 11:26 | 24 |
| Necks are such a subjective thing, there is no single right combination.
I like rock maple for a Fender-style neck. I admit that curly maple
looks nicer, but there is always the chance that curly maple will
warp. Warmouth warns of this in their catalog. They will sell a curly
maple neck, but don't advocate it.
As for the fingerboard, I prefer Rosewood or Ebony. Maple boards
are generally lacquered and have a slick feel to them. Some people
like this and other do not.
As far as neck dimension and shaping, this is a very subjective area.
I like big fat baseball ball necks, or heavy V-necks. '57 Strats have
great V-necks.
Many people advocate that the neck has more affect on tone than the
body. I think there is something to it. It has to do with transmitting
the string vibration to the bridge and pickups. The more ridgid the
neck is, the better the transmission of energy. In technical terms,
the neck is acoustically coupled to the body. The mass of both
the body and neck will affect this coupling.
Mark
|
3120.2 | | ROCKER::KNOX | Rock'n'Roll Refugee | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:04 | 2 |
|
Preferred Neck Wood... none!! I prefer composite graphite.
|
3120.3 | Who makes graphite necks? | PCBUOA::ANDERSON_R | | Mon Oct 09 1995 06:17 | 4 |
| re .2
Know any one who makes composite graphite strat necks?
Rich
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3120.4 | Stiff neck | BSS::MANTHEI | Just another outta work guitar player | Mon Oct 09 1995 09:26 | 5 |
| Wouldn't a graphite neck sound horrible?
Sure, it would fix the warp, but so would aluminum.
Mike
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3120.5 | Graphite works, Oak doesn't | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:17 | 17 |
| Graphite necks are used on some very high-end guitars and basses
including "Modulus Graphite" and "Steinbergers". Although it is
not my cup of tea, graphite does seem to work well for guitars
necks. Is is light, strong, resonant and very stable. Graphite
is impervious to moisture, and is unaffected by heat or cold.
Reagarding a previous reply: Weight is not the only factor in
tone-woods. If it was, oak and hickory would be considered fine
tone woods. The wood's ability to resonate and to transfer that
resonance to the body is the most important factor. Luthiers have
had hundreds of years to experiment with tone woods. Many woods
have been ruled out for musical instruments because they lack the
necessary acoustic prorperties. The woods that are generally
favored for necks include mahogany, maple, and to a lesser extent
Cedar.
Mark
|
3120.6 | | KDX200::COOPER | RuffRuff - BowWow! | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:30 | 4 |
| I prefer necks to be made of flesh and bone so I can wring out
every note with feeling...
:-)
|
3120.7 | Weird necks | BSS::MANTHEI | Just another outta work guitar player | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:49 | 24 |
| re: .5
Aren't Steinbergers like playing a metal truss with a pickup attached?
(hey, just kidding-put the knife down!)
Just not my cup of tea, those industrial strength things. In the
early 80's, Gibson experimented (at the customers expense) with non-
wood guitars. They used a material called "resonwood". I suppose it
meant resonant. I don't remember the time well (musta been cheap
drugs), but I heard there was fear of a wood shortage. I guess Gibson
didn't want to be left out with nothing to make guitars from.
I have a Sonex made in '81 or '82. Weighs just 3 oz. less than a full
grown Wooly Mammoth. The tone was rather decent for a cheap guitar.
I'd like to know why Gibson gave up on the reson-wood idea.
I also had an Ovation electric. (shudder) Aluminum truss neck-thru
with plastic formed to a body. I'd have to call it an interesting
sound. Because the neck had no flex, and was perfect all the time,
the action was down to nothing. You could play really fast, but then
you'd get lots of no-tone notes instead of just a few.
I may have to try the graphite. I'm sure they have done some
refinements in recent years. What about splinters? [ ;-) ]
-Mike
|
3120.8 | Lack of demand. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:55 | 4 |
| If Gibson drops a particular model, it usually means they weren't
selling.
Mark
|