Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
You are viewing a re-constructed thread by the ANZLF recovery team. For more information click here.
"Originally Posted on: Thu Aug 05, 2010 7:16 am
has anyone in guitarmaking land used doug fir for a top ? have a very dry 15 yr old top thicknessed to 2mm , that I/d like to use in an OM style guitar with e. indian rosewood back and sides. Even at 2mm the top feels heavy. Will have to brace it lightly, Your thoughts and opinions if you have used this wood would be appreciated.
"Originally Posted on: Thu Aug 05, 2010 7:16 am
has anyone in guitarmaking land used doug fir for a top ? have a very dry 15 yr old top thicknessed to 2mm , that I/d like to use in an OM style guitar with e. indian rosewood back and sides. Even at 2mm the top feels heavy. Will have to brace it lightly, Your thoughts and opinions if you have used this wood would be appreciated.
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Douglas fir seems to be stocked by quite a few tonewood suppliers. I imagine it wouldnt be as stiff as spruce so you'd probably have to go a bit thicker than with a spruce top. Bracing would need to be adjusted to suit stiffness of final thicknessed top.
Martin
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
I've never thought of using it for a top. We mix it with hardwoods for heating.
I do know that it's appreciably heavier than spruce and can be very resinous. It tends to toss splinters easily as well.
I do know that it's appreciably heavier than spruce and can be very resinous. It tends to toss splinters easily as well.
- peter.coombe
- Blackwood
- Posts: 732
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2010 2:52 pm
- Location: Bega, NSW
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Don't know about guitars, but I have used it in my mandolins. It is heavier and stiffer than Spruce, so you can thin it a bit more than Spruce. Soundwise it has a sweet tone with lots of fundamental, less overtones than Spruce, and the instrument I made was very responsive and loud. So if you want an instrument with a strong fundamental go for it.
I have found it makes great bracewood. After I ran out of Red Spruce bracewood I tried some Douglas Fir and have never used anything else since.
I have found it makes great bracewood. After I ran out of Red Spruce bracewood I tried some Douglas Fir and have never used anything else since.
Peter Coombe - mandolin, mandola and guitar maker
http://www.petercoombe.com
http://www.petercoombe.com
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
kiwigeo wrote:
Douglas fir seems to be stocked by quite a few tonewood suppliers. I imagine it wouldnt be as stiff as spruce so you'd probably have to go a bit thinner than with a spruce top. Bracing would need to be adjusted to suit stiffness of final thicknessed top.
Martin
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
The wood property tables I have indicate that douglas fir from coastal areas is about 20% stiffer and 20% denser than spruce.
So taking into account the "Cube Rule " you can go a little thinner than you would with spruce maybe 10% but that 2mm thickness is IMHO just too thin for an OM.
Trying to save weight by bracing lightly would just compound any structural problems from the thin top
Using it for ukulele or mandolin tops would certainly be viable
So taking into account the "Cube Rule " you can go a little thinner than you would with spruce maybe 10% but that 2mm thickness is IMHO just too thin for an OM.
Trying to save weight by bracing lightly would just compound any structural problems from the thin top
Using it for ukulele or mandolin tops would certainly be viable
- Nick
- Blackwood
- Posts: 3639
- Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 11:20 am
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Or a Selmer Maccaferri They come in at around 2mm thick.jeffhigh wrote:
Using it for ukulele or mandolin tops would certainly be viable
"Jesus Loves You."
Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
- John Steele
- Blackwood
- Posts: 153
- Joined: Fri Mar 06, 2009 4:58 pm
- Location: Wilson, NY. 14172
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
As a side note.
I used to make a living remodeling old houses in Calif. Most were stick framed with DF. 50-75 years ago good older growth was a plentiful & common building material.
The stuff can dry and season and be incredibly hard and stong. Tough stuff for a softwood. It was a bastid to demo out. And cutting with a saw,
blade eater even without hitting nails.
I built one guitar with a DF top. I think I left the top too thick or over braced it. It seemed way too stiff.
J
I used to make a living remodeling old houses in Calif. Most were stick framed with DF. 50-75 years ago good older growth was a plentiful & common building material.
The stuff can dry and season and be incredibly hard and stong. Tough stuff for a softwood. It was a bastid to demo out. And cutting with a saw,
blade eater even without hitting nails.
I built one guitar with a DF top. I think I left the top too thick or over braced it. It seemed way too stiff.
J
"People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it"
George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
thanks for all the input. I left the top at 2 mm cause it felt hard and heavy compared to the usual red cedar or spruce tops. Will do a standard bracing for top using 10% thinner d, fir bracewood.,Sorry never built a macafferi, but do own one with a cedar top and brazilian rosewood back and sides circa 1972. I/ve also used d. fir on baritone uke looks good, slightly heavy though.
- Nick
- Blackwood
- Posts: 3639
- Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 11:20 am
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
I suggested that tongue-in-cheek but couldn't find the appropriate smiley A '72, that would be the Ibanez produced model?tomigv wrote:
Sorry never built a macafferi, but do own one with a cedar top and brazilian rosewood back and sides circa 1972.
"Jesus Loves You."
Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
kiwigeo wrote:
Douglas fir seems to be stocked by quite a few tonewood suppliers. I imagine it wouldnt be as stiff as spruce so you'd probably have to go a bit thicker than with a spruce top. Bracing would need to be adjusted to suit stiffness of final thicknessed top.
Well there you go..I got it totally wrong. Dont have my wood tables with me though.
Martin
- DarwinStrings
- Blackwood
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2008 10:27 pm
- Location: Darwin
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
It used to be used for stud framing here a bit too John (Aussie carpenters call it "Oregon") and a lot of painters planks were made of it pre aluminium planks, I guess cause it was light and stiff.John Steele wrote:
As a side note.
I used to make a living remodeling old houses in Calif. Most were stick framed with DF. 50-75 years ago good older growth was a plentiful & common building material.
One thing for sure is that guitar will smell great.
Jim
Life is good when you are amongst the wood
Life is good when you are amongst the wood.
Jim Schofield
Jim Schofield
- Taffy Evans
- Blackwood
- Posts: 1038
- Joined: Wed Apr 30, 2008 6:54 pm
- Location: Charters Towers North Queensland
- Bob Connor
- Admin
- Posts: 3126
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 9:43 pm
- Location: Geelong, Australia
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
If it was Oregon I used to have an old house in Tassie that was full of it (bit like meself at times)
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Surprised the 1972 oval soundhole macafferi with red cedar top was built by veteran Vancouver bc luthier michael dunn , who is still building.
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Also known over this way as O'Regon or "Irish Pine". I have some very close grain count stuff in the shed and thought it would make uke tops just haven't got around to it yet. Looks like one going in the next batch.
Cheers from Micheal.
Remember the "5P Rule".
Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance.
Remember the "5P Rule".
Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance.
- Nick
- Blackwood
- Posts: 3639
- Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 11:20 am
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Niiiiice. Excellent Builder! That'll be a keeper Tom.tomigv wrote:
Surprised the 1972 oval soundhole macafferi with red cedar top was built by veteran Vancouver bc luthier michael dunn , who is still building.
"Jesus Loves You."
Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
- woodrat
- Blackwood
- Posts: 1154
- Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 6:31 am
- Location: Hastings River, NSW.
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
I agree with Peter on this. I dont use it for tops but I cant see any reason that it wouldn't be very suitable. I have a billet of old growth DF that has tight straight grain lines and is very stiff that I get all of my bracewood out of. Its very good for that.peter.coombe wrote:
I have found it makes great bracewood. After I ran out of Red Spruce bracewood I tried some Douglas Fir and have never used anything else since.
"It's never too late to be what you might have been " - George Eliot
- Stephen Kinnaird
- Blackwood
- Posts: 287
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2007 1:45 pm
- Location: Texas, USA
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
+2 for brace stock. Wonderful material.
When we read--years back--that Maurice Dupont used it exclusively for braces, that seemed like a good endoresment.
I think the French call it something like "Oregon Pine".
Steve
When we read--years back--that Maurice Dupont used it exclusively for braces, that seemed like a good endoresment.
I think the French call it something like "Oregon Pine".
Steve
There are some great woods, down under!
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Yep DF is known as Oregon Pine here in AU as well. Shiploads of the stuff bought into Australia before Glulam tech came into play. Nearly every old warehouse/factory or any other building in AU that required a large span, weight bearing structural beam that was built pre-war and up until around 1958 when Ralph Symonds introduced box ply beams will have Oregon pine right through the roof.
Symonds' factory built 1958
Douglas Fir/Oregan Pine is relatively light, incredibly strong and was available in cross sections and lengths that no native tree with a similar strength to weight ratio could produce. I had seen some 'huge' beams of clear and better doug fir craned from the roof tops of the many buildings I worked on that were demolished in Fremantle just prior to 1987 to make way for redevelopment of that great little city in readiness to host the Americas Cup yacht race.
For a long time large span buildings with wood/oregon bearers were cheaper to insure against fire than similar buildings with steel bearers. Sounds bizarre but its true. The reason was/is that these large beams take a long time to burn through and could easily be replaced if the fire was bought under control. By contrast, steel beams quickly expand with the effects of heat and then sag under their own weight. Often as they cool, because their span is effectively shorter because of the sag, they will pull their supportive walls inward as they contract which will collapse the whole building. So don't brace your guitar with steel and set it on fire of you will be real sorry.
Cheers
Symonds' factory built 1958
Douglas Fir/Oregan Pine is relatively light, incredibly strong and was available in cross sections and lengths that no native tree with a similar strength to weight ratio could produce. I had seen some 'huge' beams of clear and better doug fir craned from the roof tops of the many buildings I worked on that were demolished in Fremantle just prior to 1987 to make way for redevelopment of that great little city in readiness to host the Americas Cup yacht race.
For a long time large span buildings with wood/oregon bearers were cheaper to insure against fire than similar buildings with steel bearers. Sounds bizarre but its true. The reason was/is that these large beams take a long time to burn through and could easily be replaced if the fire was bought under control. By contrast, steel beams quickly expand with the effects of heat and then sag under their own weight. Often as they cool, because their span is effectively shorter because of the sag, they will pull their supportive walls inward as they contract which will collapse the whole building. So don't brace your guitar with steel and set it on fire of you will be real sorry.
Cheers
- Stephen Kinnaird
- Blackwood
- Posts: 287
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2007 1:45 pm
- Location: Texas, USA
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
Kim wrote:
So don't brace your guitar with steel and set it on fire or you will be real sorry.
Cheers
Kim
A word to the wise for sure. Kim, you really helped curb a temptation of mine... How did you know?
Steve
There are some great woods, down under!
- Dennis Leahy
- Blackwood
- Posts: 872
- Joined: Wed Oct 10, 2007 12:32 am
- Location: Duluth, MN, US
- Contact:
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
I played a couple of guitars made with Douglas Fir soundboards, just a couple of weeks ago. It's a fine tone wood.
Dennis
Dennis
Another damn Yank!
-
- Beefwood
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Wed Jan 21, 2009 6:09 am
- Location: Port Townsend, Washington
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
I've used old growth Douglas Fir thinned to about .100" for tops on parlor guitars. One with Bubinga back & sides, the other with Osage Orange back and sides. Both were killer guitars. Great projection for such a small guitar. I've found that Doug Fir is heavier,,but quite a bit stiffer (non-scientific term) so it can be thinned much further. I would not hesitate using it. Just watch out for runout. Other than that..go for it.
Jay
Jay
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
The .100" you used for parlour guitars is equivalent to 2.54mm, Jay
The original poster already has his thicknessed to 2mm (.078") and is wanting to use it for an OM.
Using douglas fir is not the problem, but starting with that thickness is.
The original poster already has his thicknessed to 2mm (.078") and is wanting to use it for an OM.
Using douglas fir is not the problem, but starting with that thickness is.
Re: Douglas fir for OM style guitar top?
jeffhigh wrote:
The original poster already has his thicknessed to 2mm (.078") and is wanting to use it for an OM.
May not be good for an OM but would be spot on for a Lute
Martin
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 62 guests