Falcate bracing - bass back
- matthew
- Blackwood
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Falcate bracing - bass back
Faced with the carnage wrought on large instruments in the New York winter by the dryness from a combination of subzero temps and central heating, I recently had to come up with a new bracing system for my silver medal double bass that would allow the wood to move while providing stiffness and support for the soundpost. My bass back seam opened up last winter and actually split the end block, so i had to rebuild that as well as inserting a tapered insert down the full length of the back, and then remove all the original braces.
Double basses are either roundback (using no bracing) or flatback (using traditional "ladder" bracing or "X" bracing or variants thereof. But neither of these systems appealed to me, I'm not sure why. You can see some traces of the previous traditional lateral bracing system on the back.
So I had a chat to Trevor to bounce some ideas around, and after some thought, this is what I came up with.
I call it the boomerang bracing system and the design concept is "no crossgrain gluing over 45 degrees". Hence the cutaway at the apex of the lower boomerang. The idea is that the back wood (tassie blackwood) should be able to move as it needs in humid or dry conditions without popping a brace due to differential shrinkage, and if there is anything that needs to "give" it will be a side seam which is glued with a weaker hide glue as per usual practice for the top. The centre panel is to support the pressure of the soundpost and distribute this between the braced areas.
The braces are laminated using West System and attached with hide glue. The diamond cleats are an established method of reinforcing seams.
The bass is back together and sounding even better than before. Bass response improved noticeably.
Double basses are either roundback (using no bracing) or flatback (using traditional "ladder" bracing or "X" bracing or variants thereof. But neither of these systems appealed to me, I'm not sure why. You can see some traces of the previous traditional lateral bracing system on the back.
So I had a chat to Trevor to bounce some ideas around, and after some thought, this is what I came up with.
I call it the boomerang bracing system and the design concept is "no crossgrain gluing over 45 degrees". Hence the cutaway at the apex of the lower boomerang. The idea is that the back wood (tassie blackwood) should be able to move as it needs in humid or dry conditions without popping a brace due to differential shrinkage, and if there is anything that needs to "give" it will be a side seam which is glued with a weaker hide glue as per usual practice for the top. The centre panel is to support the pressure of the soundpost and distribute this between the braced areas.
The braces are laminated using West System and attached with hide glue. The diamond cleats are an established method of reinforcing seams.
The bass is back together and sounding even better than before. Bass response improved noticeably.
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- Blackwood
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Re: Falcate bracing - bass back
Nice! The only problem I have is with the name of your bracing system...boomerangs return. So if the plan works, the bass should not return for repairs! Reminds me of the old gag "What do you call a boomerang that doesn't come back?...A stick!"
"Everything I say on the topic is based solely upon inexperience and assumption!"
- Nick
- Blackwood
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Re: Falcate bracing - bass back
Elegant solution Matthew (and Trevor) and glad it has improved the sound rather than hindered.
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Nice to hear in church but not in a Mexican prison.
- Trevor Gore
- Blackwood
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Re: Falcate bracing - bass back
Nice one, Matthew. Let's hope it doesn't get tortured quite as much this time around!
As the bass seems to sound better, is this going to become your standard back bracing? You could call it a triple bass...
As the bass seems to sound better, is this going to become your standard back bracing? You could call it a triple bass...
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Trevor Gore, Luthier. Australian hand made acoustic guitars, classical guitars; custom guitar design and build; guitar design instruction.
Trevor Gore, Luthier. Australian hand made acoustic guitars, classical guitars; custom guitar design and build; guitar design instruction.
- slowlearner
- Blackwood
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Re: Falcate bracing - bass back
Everytime I look, you guys are coming up with something new and awesome.
Pete
- Graham Long
- Blackwood
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Re: Falcate bracing - bass back
Well done, that philosophy will come in handy elsewhere.
Did you still install it at around 45% RH?
Did you still install it at around 45% RH?
- matthew
- Blackwood
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Re: Falcate bracing - bass back
It was not possible to really control RH when I installed it. However, I kept the unbraced back in plastic with a pound of silica gel crystals before I glued it all up.
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