Thanks, everybody, for your responses. I've had a busy weekend, but I'm back.
I had a feeling this thread wouldn't keep on the subject of back and side woods, but that's fine! Back and side wood choice is just one part of the equation.
Al, my current understanding (to be revised as I learn more) is that, with top woods (spruces, etc), there is generally a very close correlation between density and stiffness (within a species). I.e. a denser piece of Sitka spruce is a stiffer piece of Sitka spruce, and a less dense piece is less stiff. This suggests that an equal mass and stiffness can generally be achieved with either a denser, stiffer top made thinner, or a less dense, less stiff top made thicker - and perhaps that the sonic results are similar as well.
Now, you're saying, "Nothing will help in the volume department as much as using a low density piece of top wood, and leaving it a bit thick". In this statement, I read, "low density, therefore less stiff; appropriate stiffness achieved by making it thicker; thicker makes it heavier; end result is essentially the same as a higher density piece made thinner". But you're asserting that the end result is not the same, acoustically; rather, the end result is a louder guitar - and I'll bet you've got some data to back this up! Can you elaborate, please?
BTW, I'm leaning toward Adirondack spruce for the top, though I haven't yet ruled out either Sitka or Lutz.
As for back and side woods, Al, you mention Med. cypress, which I hadn't thought about. Does that wood generally have very low damping? I know it's a standard wood for flamencos, and I'm familiar with that sound. This will be a very different instrument, with steel strings (five double courses)... I wonder if that might be a good choice for the volume and tone I'm after.
This would get to be a very long post if I went into everything I'm planning for the design, materials, and construction of this instrument. I do believe the choice of back and sides wood is a significant piece of the puzzle, albeit just one of many pieces, and not as central as other considerations.
One part of the equation is certainly that the player has to play with a heavy pick and a strong attack, which he does, and that I have to give him an instrument with plenty of headroom. Also, he understands that an instrument designed for projection and cutting power probably won't be the sweetest sounding thing to play by himself in his living room. But he wants it to be heard (acoustically) as well as possible - significantly better than your average Irish bouzouki - in a band that includes uilleann pipes and flute (no fiddle in his current band, but I want his guit-zouk to do as well as possible alongside a fiddle as well).
Thanks again to everyone who's posted responses so far. I'll respond to more of the specifics some of you brought up later. I'll have to wait till I get a chance to log on with a high speed connection before I can listen/watch the audio and video stuff.
|