Blackwood King Billy O Model
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- Blackwood
- Posts: 311
- Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:22 am
- Location: Santa Cruz, Ca.
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Yes, a spruce top with an induced arch is "built under stress". Violin makers and repairers often spring in the bass bar "under stress". And once an instrument has strings on it, it's definitely under stress. Building them under stress is one way of countering string tension by "pre-loading" the structure of the instrument in a direction opposite what will be applied by string pull.
And when customers call repeatedly to ask if their guitar is done yet, the guitar is built under stress...
And when customers call repeatedly to ask if their guitar is done yet, the guitar is built under stress...
Rick Turner
Guitar Maker, Experimenter, Diviner
www.renaissanceguitars.com
www.d-tar.com
Guitar Maker, Experimenter, Diviner
www.renaissanceguitars.com
www.d-tar.com
- Stephen Kinnaird
- Blackwood
- Posts: 287
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2007 1:45 pm
- Location: Texas, USA
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- Blackwood
- Posts: 311
- Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:22 am
- Location: Santa Cruz, Ca.
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I've got a guy who ordered a ukulele two weeks ago who is already calling wondering if there is a problem!
Yeah, buddy, with the fact that you don't have anything better to do than call three times and email wondering how we're doing on your uke!
And the box is assembled, the fingerboard is on the neck, and it goes into the finish room next week. This is practically record time for us...
The moral of the story is that if you build them quicker, your customers will still call and want them even faster. Slow down...
Yeah, buddy, with the fact that you don't have anything better to do than call three times and email wondering how we're doing on your uke!
And the box is assembled, the fingerboard is on the neck, and it goes into the finish room next week. This is practically record time for us...
The moral of the story is that if you build them quicker, your customers will still call and want them even faster. Slow down...
Rick Turner
Guitar Maker, Experimenter, Diviner
www.renaissanceguitars.com
www.d-tar.com
Guitar Maker, Experimenter, Diviner
www.renaissanceguitars.com
www.d-tar.com
- Dennis Leahy
- Blackwood
- Posts: 872
- Joined: Wed Oct 10, 2007 12:32 am
- Location: Duluth, MN, US
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I too forgot to go back into this thread. Interesting to me for several reasons:bob wrote:Dennis wrote:Dennis it doesn't make this guitar feel heavy but our instruments are usually fairly light. So a bit of extra beef isn't going to concern me if I can reproduce the response on another one. BTW there's some Blackwood out of the same billet in your "care parcel"Very cool experiment with the sides, and yes, I would think very heavy
1.) I need to actually pack up the "care parcel" that is going to you, Bob. I think I have waited long enough, and the wood is seasoned well. Hot damn, it is exciting to know that some of this Tasmanian Blackwood is coming my way!
2.) I bought some veneer to make a laminated guitar - the sides and back will be 3-ply Walnut/black dyed Anigre/Walnut (the black dyed stuff I have just happens to be Anigre, it wasn't done on purpose), and I'm counting on getting stiff sides and a relatively stiff reflective back. Black inner core will look better with a soundport, methinks. Your experiments with double sides are encouraging, Bob, but your key may be the .160" overall thickness providing a stiffness and density that is far greater than what I will achieve with 3 veneer layers.
Dennis
Another damn Yank!
- Rod True
- Siberian Tiger
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Thu Sep 27, 2007 10:18 am
- Location: Abbotsford, BC Canada
The only thing I would worry about with this Bob is what that much heat will do to the holding quality of the glue. I would think you'll be boiling the glue and how with the sides hold up after that?bob wrote:...When I was in the States last year Bob Cefalu and I were contemplating the possibilty of glueing the sides together flat and then putting them in the side bender. The heat would allow the glue to slip a bit while bending.
We couldn't see why it wouldn't work
It's certainly something I'm going to try with some spare sides.
"I wish one of the voices in your head would tell you to shut the hell up." - Warren De Montegue
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- Myrtle
- Posts: 79
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- Location: Eastern Washington, USA
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- hilo_kawika
- Blackwood
- Posts: 144
- Joined: Mon Oct 13, 2008 10:29 am
- Location: Hilo, Hawaii
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Very lovely instrument Bob. I bet it sounds as great as it looks.
Laminating sides. I think I mentioned this in another thread but I laminated the sides of several dozen ukuleles I've built. Laminating sides was very common in the 1920's in the Lyon & Healy factory for special models.
If you're going to try to bend and glue at the same time, probably a thermosetting glue such as hide glue would be a good choice rather than "yellow glue".
When sides are laminated, the air resonance of the instrument goes up. This can be a good thing or a bad one depending on the actual frequency of the resonance relative to the lowest open string. I liked to have the air resonance a semitone lower than the lowest open string if I could get it. That way you have the lower register working but the air resonance frequency doesn't coincide with an actual open or fretted string - which usually makes for a dead sounding, "thunky" note.
aloha,
Dave Hurd
http://www.ukuleles.com
Laminating sides. I think I mentioned this in another thread but I laminated the sides of several dozen ukuleles I've built. Laminating sides was very common in the 1920's in the Lyon & Healy factory for special models.
If you're going to try to bend and glue at the same time, probably a thermosetting glue such as hide glue would be a good choice rather than "yellow glue".
When sides are laminated, the air resonance of the instrument goes up. This can be a good thing or a bad one depending on the actual frequency of the resonance relative to the lowest open string. I liked to have the air resonance a semitone lower than the lowest open string if I could get it. That way you have the lower register working but the air resonance frequency doesn't coincide with an actual open or fretted string - which usually makes for a dead sounding, "thunky" note.
aloha,
Dave Hurd
http://www.ukuleles.com
How to become a millionaire? Start with $2 million and become a luthier...
- Bob Connor
- Admin
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There'e plenty of glueing area there Rod and I'd only have the sides heated for about 4 minutes. I don't know what efffect that'll have on Titebond but I can see Daves rationale for using something like HHG.
To be honest it's only a theory, but one worth pursuing with a couple of spare sides to see what happens.
Yes Dennis - we'll have to get the great wood exchange moving.
To be honest it's only a theory, but one worth pursuing with a couple of spare sides to see what happens.
Yes Dennis - we'll have to get the great wood exchange moving.
- Rod True
- Siberian Tiger
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Thu Sep 27, 2007 10:18 am
- Location: Abbotsford, BC Canada
Oh, definitely worth pursuing Bob! Just the thinking in my head about the glue that had me questioning.bob wrote:There'e plenty of glueing area there Rod and I'd only have the sides heated for about 4 minutes. I don't know what efffect that'll have on Titebond but I can see Daves rationale for using something like HHG.
To be honest it's only a theory, but one worth pursuing with a couple of spare sides to see what happens.
Yes Dennis - we'll have to get the great wood exchange moving.
"I wish one of the voices in your head would tell you to shut the hell up." - Warren De Montegue
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