comfyfoot wrote:
Dale,
I admire your adventurous spirit and desire to innovate. I introduced myself similarly here back in December. I took much of the advise to heart, perhaps you will find some of the comments I received helpful, I certainly did, and though at first some of them seemed close minded, I quickly realized that they were right.
viewtopic.php?f=10101&t=25054First, it would be helpful to restate your goals of the build, which if I remember is better separation for recording. I don't see why one would mess with the guitar if the recording process is the issue, seems a multi-pin out put jack with a multiple pickup array would be more relevant.
What I realized with the help from the forum, you can really mess with your mind to figure out how to alter bracing for a desired effect, staying within the boundaries of conventional luthery wisdom. I agree with the suggestion about Somogyi's class, you will get to your goal faster jumping off of his experience, then what you are doing. At very least, you should read his book, as well as other's, these authors are not lost, and are not preaching the world is flat, there is solid research done in a controlled fashion. Tom Edison invented the lightbulb by trial and error, but he did so with the process of making a vacuum in a glass set, so he could plug in filaments until one worked. If you are serious about making this work and creating a viable prototype, you need to be able to create or access rims and necks that are reasonably alike. I am halfway through Guit #2, not including the prototype as a number, I have set up to make rims and necks, and what a surprise, the whole top and back bracing and tuning takes only a few hours, and is a small part of the time to make a guitar, though critical.
Personally, when (if) I go back to experimenting with braceless or alternative bracing, I would jump off from Brunner's work and Klepper's, but that won't be until I can make rims and necks in my sleep, and after I have a vast library of info read and understood. Somogyi, GAL books, Caruth off the top of my head.
As and opinion and a gut feeling, based on some of my prototype work, I think you are on a path of limited success, but your methods of research are likely to cause you even more time lost. If you ask your friends with many instruments which they play the most, the answer is usually the one that is comfortable and easy to play, not the one with the best sound. Making the guitar bigger is less comfortable and will be less desirable to play, no matter the advantages gained.
Best of luck, I admire your chin, you have certainly taken some shots here and come back with a good attitude.
Rob
Hi Rob,
thanks for the input.. I will check your thread when i get a bit of time to give it an honest read..
there are a few things I would like to point out... that might explain my responses, and/or my approach..
1. I do not have a goal, other than to bring the idea to some sort of fruition... it came to me, i did not go looking for it,
so I just want to try it out, and see where it goes. (this explains me not wanting to work from others research, etc, im merely trying to build this specific idea,
even if its not the best, worst, or otherwise useful to anyone else, or myself.
2. I have a perhaps odd viewpoint about knowledge, I feel "learning" what someone else teaches can be good, but it can also narrow, or stifle other ideas.
i.e. if I were to believe that the guitar could never be approached as 2 separate sides, which is stated clearly in the book on luthiery that i read to get started,
if i just accepted that fact, I would then not follow my idea at all, but the truth is, my idea, for better or worse did work. and it did have the qualites of sound that
I thought it might produce.. again.. good or bad, and unrefined as it might be...
3. I'm not really in this for money, fame, kudos (althought they do feel good, so thanks to those that have complimented it) and I am not even 100% sure
that I would want this to be "the next big thing", it just is what it is,...
4. I don't want this guitar to sound like other guitars. It seems as if many people have advice on how to achieve a sound, how to get the guitar to sound more like
what they think a guitar should sound like... to me that has very little to do with this project, I wish I could call it something else, so that everyone could forget it
being a guitar. I.e. a voilin has a wonderful sound, all to itself, nobody says, that violin doesnt have boom bass... or power, etc... (they might, but ofcourse I dont
read those threads

5. I want it to not have the bass which I believe is somewhat overpowering, and possibly partly responsible for muddy recording qualities of "tradition" acoustics.
6. I dont take comments, and critisim too personally, I realize that this is a different approach to a guitar build, and its not really a guitar, but 2- 3 stringed
instrument that could be confused for a guitar, I do not expect anyone who is used to guitars, or is in the know about guitars to accept this different approach,
especially if they don't do much recording, and particularly recording while singing with the guitar...
7. like it or not, i realize this is a slow slow slow evolving industry, and one that is also heavily grounded in some fairly old designs. A 60 year old guitar can hold
its own with most current guitars, im not saying thats bad, and not saying its good, but I am saying its not moving at the speed of light, or as fast as other
"technologies". its all good, and I love old guitars, just saying i am kinda "real" about it in my head, and I was not expecting this to "catch on" or have people
knocking down my door...
8. I am a little surprized that there are not at least a few luthiers out there, who see this and think.. "ok, this guy, with no building talent, no experience, and a
totally untested design, with zero refinements.. slapped together this guitar, which to some at least, records in a very good way, Imagine what I as a luthier could
do..." , now some have indeed said that, but they seem to lack the time and financial freedom, or perhaps lack the excitement about it to bring it to happening.
anyway, just wanted to clearly state where im at with this, and why I might answer the way i do,
i dont want to sound stubborn, it just is what it is, and im not looking to make a guitar like todays guitars are... (not trying to lump them together, but they are basically the same)
cheers,
Dale