Rodent wrote:
what I find to be the key factors in getting a specific sound are:
- neck construction design and manufacturing techniques
- pickup placement (location) and selection
- string selection
- set-up (pickup height, action, etc ...)
I'll buy that!
Rodent wrote:
to be clear, I am not saying that all woods impart identical sound qualities to an instrument. what I am saying is that it is impossible to precisely quantify the exact tonal impact that a specific wood used at a specific place will impart to the overall bass build. I am also saying that there is no magic recepie for mixing wood species to create a specific tonality to an instrument IMO. and I am also humbly identifying these statements as my personal, unauthoratative opinion based on my personal building/repair/customizing experiences
I'll buy that too, as no two pieces of wood are identical.
Rodent wrote:
to answer AzWhoFan, I do tap my body and neck blanks but not for the purpose you might imagine. as in other materials, a hairline crack will usually not be visible to the eye when the material block is in its rough state. tapping the material block will result in a sonic resonance when the material is crack free. tapping the material block will result in a dull thud when there are internal hairline cracks. I tap check my wood to determine the presence of these cracks, and choose wood that rings freely knowing it's relatively crack free.
So then how would you determine if a crack-free piece of would not end up as a [to put it as someone else mentioned] "tone-turd"?
Rodent wrote:
I'll keep this thread open so long as discussion remains civil. all too often this topic spins into a heated religious type of debate - and I prefer not to enable that kind of discourse here on LB. also understand that neither myself nor any other instrument builder is an absolute authority on this topic. just because "improperly deified instrument builder" said it doesn't make their statement an absolute authority. understand that many building businesses intentionally generate marketing hype about their "anointed wood" selections to entice potential buyers to choose their product brand over another. my only concern is that unsuspecting consumers have digested these statements as absolute truth, and missed the fact that it's really a combination of skillful marketing and personal opinion
all the best,
R
I had no idea this was a heated topic. i sure don't want to start any flame wars!
My curiosity about this subject got peaked recently when I acquired a Collings 290 - their equivalent of a 2-pup Les Paul JR. It's a set-neck all-mahogany construction guitar. That guitar is the most resonant electric instrument [bass or guitar] I've ever owned. It damn near sounds like an acoustic when not plugged in. I had always thought that mahog would be more dull and lifeless than say a similar piece of maple. But now I am proven wrong. So now I'm wondering how the elves at Collings managed to produce such a beast.