Hi all! Here´s a (thumbnail´d) picture of the bridge on my selmer replica:
Also, here´s a link to the manufacturer:
http://www.apc-instruments.com/indexen.html (it´s the 802 model) - there are more images there, in case you´re interested.
As you can see, it´s a thin bridge (0.295 inches wide). As i´ve never found a bridge like this anywhere else (the bridges i´ve see on the selmer replicas out there are much wider and look "sturdier"), i was wondering if someone around here could tell me if they have seen bridges like mine and how could a thinner bridge affect the sound of the guitar (having a smaller object to transmit the vibrations to the soundboard).
Thanks in advance,
Miguel.
Comments
I don't know where you'd buy a bridge like that except for the maker. Bergeijk also makes very thin bridges - he's in Belgium?
I make lots of bridges but I use the standard width, though I carve em down to get them as light as possible. Mine aren't particularly pretty or finished off. I do it for getting both intonation and of course the height where I want it. I don't want to do it for others cuz I need the guitar to do it well, and I don't want to sand and polish. Once I stain em to match, you can't see the poor finish unless your pretty close.
I doubt there's any problem with your bridge being thin and light. Bergeijk does them this way for the reason I gave. Most luthiers hollow out the bridge to achieve some weight loss. I've never seen a GJ guitar with a solid un-lightened bridge.
The problems I see with most bridges is that they are not intoned (the guitar doesn't play in tune up and down the neck), and a few new bridges are not mated very well to the top (the feet don't sit flat on the surface of the guitar). This can have a profound effect on the sound that anybody would hear when compared to a well fitted bridge. Keep in mind that the foot of the bridge only needs to mate where the truss is inside the guitar. Bridge makers will often relieve the very ends of the bridge which is not over the supporting structure inside. In other words it isn't necessary that ever bit of the foot is in contact just that most of the foot is in contact and particularly that portion over the strut - brace - or what ever you call that little support peice under the top and under the bridge.
It doesn't have to be perfect but real close. If you see daylight between a significant part of the bridge foot and guitar top, it needs help, unless you like the extra twang and drop in volume.
If your guitar sounds good, your bridge is probably fine. Most luthiers are pretty good about fitting the bridge but its easy to see daylight if you check.
As always, learn so much from your posts, thanks for weighing in. Would you care to comment on how adding a saddle to a Selmer style bridge fits in the equation? I made a saddled bridge last spring so I could try various piezo pickups. It seems to be fairly good acoustically, but not as good as the all wood one. The saddle is not tightly captive and in light of your earthquake, all hell breaking loose description, I wonder if some of the energy is being lost in the fit of the saddle to the bridge. I've seen saddles on the Selmer style guitars of no less a builder than Jean Pierre Favino, so, though not common, they must not be all bad when done right.
Craig
Bob (if i can call you that), could by any chance the scandinavian university be Kungliga Tekniska Hogskola (http://www.kth.se/) ? i have some papers regarding violin and guitar acoustics from them that i´m going through at the moment.
once more, thanks everybody.
Miguel.
have a weaker sound. How does it sound?
Golly,that's some explanation!
On the the Gitane instruments, the makers use a large contact area on the ends of the bridges as opposed to Selmer's/ Dupont's design of raised ends - like flying wings.
What effect does saving off the ends have on tone and volume? I've done this on my own instruments, together with carving our the insides of their ebony bridges, and achieved much better sound. But I did this as an act of faith thinking that Selmer and Dupont were smarter than me, and by doing so, I'd benefit - which I did. But, I don't know why, besides lightening the mass.
Any ideas?
As for the other questions: Well, it's all about energy transmission... so a lot of these issues go straight back to that. So, here' goes... Sound waves get attenuated when they encounter a mechanical impedance differential which is just a fancy way of saying that they hit something that vibrates in a different way. In other words, the nature or amount of the resistance to the sound changes... Why is that? Well, a number of reasons, but for now just consider that a frequency which is good at propagating through one type of material is usually bad at propagating through a material that is substantially different. Consider that a bird whistle may carry for miles through air because it is focused and has a high pitch... and a whale's call may carry for miles through water because it is powerful and low-pitched... But you couldn't hear the birds call from even one inch under the water and you couldn't hear the whale's call from even one inch above the water. Why is that? You don't want to know. Mechanical wave propagation does not make good cocktail party conversation. Just know that different types/frequencies of energy travels through different materials in different ways and most energy is lost or filtered when the medium or substrate through which a (sound) wave is traveling changes.
So, why tell you about bird calls and whale song to answer a question about bridge feet? Simply this: to help you visualize in a grand way, what happens in much smaller ways when sound travels between materials that are only slightly different... spruce vs. rosewood... silver vs. ebony... galalith vs. brass... piezo element vs. rosewood bridge. All those transitions attenuate the sound and these attenuations are frequency dependent. In other words, they're filters.
So let's apply it:
What happens when you put a piezo element on a bridge instead of cementing it into the bridge? Well, you have constructed an acoustic filter of some type. Does it sound good? Depends on whether it passes the frequencies you want and attenuates ones you don't want...
What happens when you change the size of the bridge feet? Depends on whether you like what your changes did to the mechanical "circuit" represented by the bridge and its contact with the top.
So, basically all of these things are essentially filters. The "why they work or don't work" is a bit more complicated, but the outcome is something to be judged by you, the player. If you like the sound of the thin bridge or inset piezo... then rock on, man. Just don't do anything to the guitar that's permanent so you can go back to your original setup easily. There is a special level in hell for people who mod nice guitars and a special level in heaven for people who are good instrument custodians and/or who restore them to their original state.
Oh, and yes, the up & down motion of a bridge is really more of a seesaw motion than a pure pistonic up-n-down.
as for changing the bridge, i was not thinking of doing such a thing (at least not for now), as i would have to change the moustaches and study the neck angle properly, and i´m afraid i would end up damaging more than improving my guitar - even if it´s not a proper selmer replica. i just wanted to know if there are more people having thinner bridges and grasp the consensus around that kind of bridge and it´s properties.
as for how it sounds, i wouldn´t be a proper judge of that, since this is the only selmer style guitar i´ve heard so far (i´ve not played much steel stringed guitars either) and my technique is still very immature. i could post some sound samples if anyone is interested, though.
once again, thanks for all the input.
Miguel.
I've seen new guitars cheap and not with one edge of the foot doing all the work. Don't be afraid to get your guitar working properly, but do work very slowly and check everything often as you go. My limited experience with professional guitar techs has been very positive, but I've only used guys who've been at it a long time.
An ill fitting bridge sounds pretty bad.
If you want to see how many thin bridges are out there, a good sample of the best guitars "out there" are on the store section of the site. I can't recall seeing a thin bridge. Even so, I wouldn't be concerned. Nearly all of the bridges adhere very closely to the art deco fashion of Maccaferri's brilliant design. Few luthiers depart from the tradition. I hope that Bob's wide discussion of bridge design helps with the idea that thin is fine if the luthier makes it work.
I guessed you were concerned about the sound. I suspect that anyone new to the sound (several years or more!) has to wonder about the thing they just bought.
The Maccaferri sound was new to me eight years ago. I now prefer these guitars but the old standards of guitar sound still make them sound a bit foreign, and also hard to judge. There so much variability in these that it stays interesting, and hard to find a sonic foothold.
After years of exclusively playing these and maybe three years of playing really good ones, my own evaluation of what is good is still in motion. Among others I have a Dupont VR. It's awesome and seems most useful for all that I do without giving up anything from its GJ credentials, but ya never know.