#1
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Nato back and sides
Ok, so I've used the search engine to find more about this budget wood - nato. I've come up with a few threads where those say it resembles mahogany in tone, which is what I was to believe as well. So I've got my first nato back and sides guitar (which is still in question - it is a Tak EG430S Korean made guitar, and some sites read nato and other sites read mahogany, the latter coming from the Tak site itself. Still, I feel strong that at this price point that it could very well be nato). Still, with that set aside, has nato ever been considered as a solid back and sides tonewood for an alternative, budget friendly, all solid wood guitar? If not, then why? Is nato just a bad choice for a solid b/s wood construction?
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Bryan |
#2
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It is a type of mahogany, just like sapele. I did not discover this until I read up on the Taylor guitars website. Pretty sure there is a thread around here that explains about nato being a type of mahogany. I'm not really sure which thread it was, though.
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#3
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Are you sure the back and sides are solid? Most G-series are laminated.
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gits: good and plenty chops: snickers |
#4
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NATO = Not A Tree Originally. I don't care what they say. IMO doesn't look like wood, doesn't feel like wood, doesn't sound like wood. Just say NO to NATO.
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#5
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Nato (pronounced "natto," not like the acronym for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization) is a genuine species of real wood that's used mainly for laminated backs and sides in Yamaha guitars and other brands of instruments built mainly in Asia. I asked about it to a guitar builder friend who told me that it's an okay tonewood when used on its own as a solid wood in guitar-building, but that it's nothing terribly special, either, and there really isn't much motivation to build using it.
whm |
#6
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I have to disagree about the sound. I have a Yamaha with nato back and sides, sounds great.
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#7
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It's not bad. Kind of like cherry in its lack of flash or pizazz in terms of tone when used as back and sides material.
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#8
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Quote:
It definately looks like a wood species to me. Here's a pic of the said guitar back:
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Bryan Last edited by bfloyd6969; 06-12-2010 at 02:49 PM. |
#9
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I got a Jasmine S34C for a ridiculous price off of Ebay. Has said Nato neck, back and sides. Sounded good enough that I installed a Martin thin-line PU, Schaller tuners, Tusq saddle and cut a sound port. Great for weekends on my sailboat.
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#10
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#11
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I think Nato is another name for what I've heard called Phillipine mahogany. It's used widely in laminated guitars. There's nothing wrong with it. It's just not quarter-sawn Brazilian rosewood. LOL.
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#12
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Quote:
I was going to ask how to lower the action. It doesn't seem to be an allen head on the neck rod. |
#13
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#14
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Quote:
So-called "Philippine mahogany" is luan, which is a considerably lower quality wood than nato is. I worked for a couple of years in a touristy store in Crown Center in Kansas City playing and selling mountain dulcimers and kits for them, mostly made from luan. The better quality kits and instruments had genuine solid walnut and spruce vibrating plates, but probably 90% of what I sold was made from luan. It's not something I'm proud of...I mean, I liked the job at the time, mainly because I was getting paid to stand around and play dulcimer and other instruments and talk to people all day long, both of which tasks I'm pretty good at. But I suspect that - if the Roman Catholic Church is correct and there IS a Purgatory - I'm likely to spend ten or twenty thousand years in Purgatory for having sold so many crappy luan dulcimer kits to so many nice, unsuspecting people. Luan is trashwood, at least so far as musical instrument construction is concerned. Nato is not. Wade Hampton Miller |
#15
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Nato sides/back on my Yamaha FG 720,...no complaints here.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nato_wood http://www.musiciansfriend.com/document?doc_id=99234 Nato, also known as Eastern mahogany, has a warm resonance, is very strong, and is often used in the necks of less expensive electric guitars because it's not as costly as mahogany. Last edited by johnnysain; 09-16-2010 at 08:47 PM. |