For your viewing pleasure, I have just published a profile on an experimental guitar by OLF's own Dennis Leahy. Called Angelina, it features an unsual bracing system as well as some clever bits of lutherie.
I can't link pics directly to here so do pop by to:
http://guitarbench.com/index.php/2009/0 ... nis-leahy/ for the full audio/Visual presentation. As always, I present the text portion of the profile for your consideration- although I do highly recommend popping by to see the pics!
Warmest regards,
Terence
www.guitarbench.comGuitar Database| Angelina by Dennis Leahy
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Luthier Facts :
Name: Dennis Leahy
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Taking Orders?: Contact
* Model: Angelina
* Type: 6 string acoustic
* Year: 2006
* Serial #: 001
* Back/Sides Wood: figured Bubinga
* Top Wood: Lutz Spruce
* Neck Wood: curly Cherry (laminated, with Walnut/Maple/Walnut veneer center stripe)
* Fingerboard: Katalox (including sapwood stripe)
* Fret Markers: abalone dots
* Bridge: Katalox (rotated 4°)
* Body Bindings: Katalox, with birdseye Maple/black dyed veneer/birdseye Maple purflings
* Top Trim: none
* Backstrip: none
* Rosette: soundhole bound in Katalox
* Condition: See description below
* Body Length: in. 19-5/16″
* Upper Bout: in. 12-5/16″
* Lower Bout: in. 16-1/8″
* Body Depth @ Heel: in. 4″
* Body Depth @ Tail: in. 4-7/8″
* Scale Length: in. 25.34″
* Nut Width: in. 1-25/32″
* String spacing in. 2-1/16″
I came to know Dennis after he very kindly contacted me about the interview I had done with Adrian Lucas (see the interview here). I was intrigued to learn about the guitar he had built as it was an amalgam of various novel ideas in lutherie. I asked him to let us in on his project and I received an amazing amount of resources: pics, MP3s and videos. But most important, Dennis wrote up his thoughts on this guitar & it's construction. Published below are Dennis' take on his guitar:"
When I saw that you had interviewed Adrian Lucas (and, I suspect that many American luthiers did not know who he is) I got excited and wanted to thank you for your efforts.
Adrian Lucas is one of my mentors, though he doesn’t know it. I designed a “pivoting radial” bracing system, then, as I was in the process of building it, I became aware of Lucas’ radial X design. I was very pleased to hear his results, because my own experiment was not yet finished - and it gave me confidence that I was on the right track.This is one of those times where someone re-invents something without knowing it. When my Angelina guitar was designed, I had never heard of Adrian Lucas, had never seen the Ned Steinberger patent for a bridge system kind of similar to mine, and was unaware that suspended bracing had been used before - notably by Tilton, I think in about the 1850’s. So, I blindly reinvented several concepts to engineer Angelina.
Angelina was a proof of concept guitar even more than a prototype. And, it was my first guitar. And, so far it is my only guitar.
Angelina was a pile of experiments, very far from the “scientific method” of starting from a known guitar’s engineering, and then modifying one element at a time. So, by all rights, it should have ended up as “guitar-shaped, wall hanging artwork.”
Surprisingly, it is one of the best sounding steelstring guitars I have ever heard, and a dozen luthiers and players confirm what I’m hearing. Most noticeable to me is the articulation and clarity of bass and mid-bass notes, and the guitar shines in dropped tunings (I play mostly in DADGAD, and a few songs in CADGAD and BADGAD, or dropping the low E to C or B and then partial capoing the other 5 strings on the 2nd through 5th fret.) Surprisingly, even dropping a standard .053″ D’Addario Phosphor Bronze down to a B works pretty well, without a huge drop-off in bass volume.
The engineering of Angelina was a first attempt at breaking free from an X-braced soundboard. With deep respect for Martin engineering and all of the wonderful guitars that have been built using an X brace strategy, I had an idea that the X brace is first and foremost a structural element (to keep the guitar from imploding from 160 to 200 pounds of force from string pull.) The idea began with, “What if I could eliminate the X brace, and design soundboard bracing simply from a sonic standpoint, rather than structural…?”
Angelina has suspended bracing (a pair of triangles - a nod to architect Buckminster Fuller) from neck block to tail block. Using a “Tunnel Bridge” and a tailpiece, all of the shear force of the strings is removed from the soundboard, although the low exit holes on the backside of the bridge do create a fulcrum, and so the soundboard does experience torque forces. I figured an offset soundhole would allow more of the soundboard to be active, especially for bass notes, and made a large (4″ dia.) soundhole to enhance trebles.
The “Pivoting Radial” soundboard bracing consists of just a single, unbroken “pivot” brace, glued laterally in line with and beneath the saddle, and rotated 4° as is the bridge and saddle. There are a pair of bridge plates, echoing the canoe-shaped bridge, and ten sonic braces slightly overlapping and radiating out from the bridge plates (a nod to Adrian Lucas.) The bridge is canoe-shaped, purposely to destabilize it, to permit unfettered longitudinal rocking.
Angelina also sports a compound Florentine cutaway, a Grant Goltz-inspired adjustable 24 fret neck (floating above the soundboard), a uniquely shaped, Katalox-capped, Bubinga-backed headstock with straight string paths, and a built-in Katalox tailpiece in the unique butt of the guitar. The feminine shape of the guitar was part whimsy, and partially to ensure that the longest string would be long enough to go from tailpiece to tuner.
Immediately, on the first strum on Angelina, I knew I had hit on something special. I’m convinced that the concept will also make a very good baritone guitar, and probably a good acoustic bass guitar as well. In fact, I am also working on a concert/parlor-sized guitar, which are usually a bit sparse in bass, to see how well the engineering transfers over to small-bodied instruments.
I should mention that Angelina sounds like a steelstring guitar - not like a piano or some other instrument. I see the success of the engineering in expanding the breadth of articulate bass capability, and without the soundboard-distorting string shear force (and, with further reduction in torque in future versions of the tunnel bridge) the soundboard should last longer than other lightly braced guitars. It even opens a pathway for luthiers that like X-bracing, in that they could shave and scallop beyond what they would normally dare, in their quest for their sonic signature or Holy Grail timbre.
I also have a big hunch that the suspended bracing, tunnel bridge, and tailpiece system provides a larger target or larger “sweet spot” that may allow a wide variety of sonic bracing styles and patterns to produce pleasant sounding and balanced instruments - if the luthier braces lightly - because then the soundboard is freed to do its sonic job without being forced to perform both structurally and sonically. Again, that’s just my hunch, and it will take quite a few guitars to prove or disprove that idea.
I was fortunate that Todd Lunneborg, who has written a couple of Fretboard Journal articles and is himself both a luthier and a player, stopped by my house recently and played Angelina. I did not get anything approaching broadcast quality, but I got some casual living room playing of Angelina by Todd. And, Todd graciously allowed me to broadcast clips from the living room sessions. I really appreciated Todd’s comment on the Luthier Community forum: “Dennis’ 1st guitar is killer, crazy bass but not overpowering and even mids and trebles. The mids and trebs are right where I like em but he figured how to crank the bass “to 11″ and it’s still sounds even. Supremo work for guitar number 1, I’d say!!!”)
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