DjangoBooks.com

Put Your Guitar on a Diet!

13

Comments

  • GouchGouch FennarioNew ALD Originale D, Zentech Proto, ‘50 D28
    Posts: 123

    Great to have these weights. First time I’ve seen a stack of nice instruments weighed and documented. More data please!


    I don’t disagree one bit about “lighter is better overall, generally” (assuming there’s responsibly planned-out structural integrity). Bob Bennedetto has some good thoughts on this in his archtop book, including the potential weight-reduction benefits of a Mahogany neck on an archtop guitar, which not many builders build.

    As a player and small builder, for this particular instrument (assuming: Selmer-style walnut neck, laminated sides), my findings have lead me to focus primarily on top weight and top freedom-of-movement. If you want to drill way in on top-deflection mind blowers, the master has thought it through https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ervin_Somogyi

    With solid back/side steel strings, and archtops, there’s more sonic-coupling of the plates that (it turns out, brilliantly) Macca and Selmer minimized with their use of laminates (it might have been a production cost decision primarily, initially).

    BillDaCostaWilliamsBuco
  • BillDaCostaWilliamsBillDaCostaWilliams Barreiro, Portugal✭✭✭ Altamira M01F, Huttl, 8 mandolins
    Posts: 654

    I hadn't come across Somogyi before. His ideas on visual harmony in lutherie are very striking:

    This is a bit of a side-track from the topic of lightness though (unless we include lightness of the wallet).

    BucoLango-Django
  • pdgpdg ✭✭
    Posts: 488

    Weight is a complicated issue. There's nothing louder, or heavier, than a very heavy resonator banjo, with a massive metal tone ring. However, the drumhead is extremely light and as stiff as you want to tighten it.

    BonesBuco
  • BonesBones Moderator
    Posts: 3,323

    Especially in a Selmac, I would guess like 70-80% of it is how you build the top and neck angle (assuming the rest of it is properly built). Considering that the back is laminated and relatively heavily braced.

  • slowlearnerslowlearner ✭✭
    Posts: 40

    Just curious, what sort of scale is used to get the weights? I'd like to check a couple of my guitars but what with? Neither the kitchen scale nor the bathroom scale seem like they would yield accurate results.

  • Posts: 5,032
    Every note wants to go somewhere-Kurt Rosenwinkel
  • mac63000mac63000 Fox Island, WANew Geronimo Mateos Jazz B
    Posts: 248

    I used a good quality food scale that measures in grams and stuck my Mateos on there for fun. I was able to stand it on its end thanks to the end pin jack, keeping the weight on the scale with nothing hanging awkwardly. It came in around 3.8lbs, I was pretty surprised.

  • BillDaCostaWilliamsBillDaCostaWilliams Barreiro, Portugal✭✭✭ Altamira M01F, Huttl, 8 mandolins
    Posts: 654

    It came in around 3.8lbs, I was pretty surprised.

    Thanks, I'm also surprised (and don't have a scales handy) as they have a pickup and tailpin jack.

  • mac63000mac63000 Fox Island, WANew Geronimo Mateos Jazz B
    Posts: 248

    This was without the pickup installed, but still very light!

Sign In or Register to comment.
Home  |  Forum  |  Blog  |  Contact  |  206-528-9873
The Premier Gypsy Jazz Marketplace
DjangoBooks.com
USD CAD GBP EUR AUD
USD CAD GBP EUR AUD
Banner Adverts
Sell Your Guitar
© 2024 DjangoBooks.com, all rights reserved worldwide.
Software: Kryptronic eCommerce, Copyright 1999-2024 Kryptronic, Inc. Exec Time: 0.01474 Seconds Memory Usage: 2.380402 Megabytes
Kryptronic