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  #1  
Old 03-25-2012, 07:58 AM
laganlutherie laganlutherie is offline
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Default Curved Laminated Bracing?

As mentioned previously, Sam Irwin, luthier and Tutor at Lagan Lutherie School, is experimenting with curved Laminated braces.
I thought we should post some pics and get opinions on this.
We're not sure if this has been done before, but if anyone out there knows of something like this, please let us know!
Please note, this is an experiment and we're not professing that this is the be all and end all of bracing!


(Bridge patch to be added)



Each brace is two pieces of spruce glued together vertically over a curve.
At this early stage we're finding that the top is very stiff, allowing the overall mass of the braces to be greatly reduced compared to standard bracing patterns.

I sense controversy! Discuss!

(And on another note, we recently added some videos of guitars made at LLS to our Youtube Channel)
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Old 03-25-2012, 08:27 AM
charles Tauber charles Tauber is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by laganlutherie View Post
I thought we should post some pics and get opinions on this.
We're not sure if this has been done before, but if anyone out there knows of something like this, please let us know!
Curved braces have been done before. Lutes employed them in construction as early as C. 1600. Kasha/Schneider guitars employed curved braces. Neither were laminated. In the last 20 or so years, many luthiers have used straight laminated braces, often with carbon fiber.

Quote:
Each brace is two pieces of spruce glued together vertically over a curve.
I interpret this to mean that there are two pieces of spruce, each full height, that are glued and clamped face-toface against a curved caul/form (i.e. side ways). Is that correct?

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At this early stage we're finding that the top is very stiff, allowing the overall mass of the braces to be greatly reduced compared to standard bracing patterns.
An interesting experiment. Straight braces will offer lateral stiffness proportional to the thickness of the braces - primarily, they offer stiffness along a line. By curving the braces, the lateral stiffness is increased, potentially quite significantly, providing stiffness to an area, rather than primarily a line. That could be a good thing - or it could inhibit motion in a bad way.

If you wanted to decrease mass even further, you could use carbon fiber in your braces and/or drill lateral holes in the sides of the braces.

Quote:
I sense controversy!
No, not really. I don't see any more or less rhyme or reason to it than a lot of other things folks have tried. If, empirically, it produces a perceived improvement in either sound or longevity, great.

Thanks for sharing what you are doing.
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Old 03-25-2012, 08:37 AM
Brackett Instruments Brackett Instruments is offline
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I believe Trevor Gore is currently using curved, laminated bracing. I haven't had the pleasure of playing one of his guitars.


Quote:
I sense controversy! Discuss!
People will find controversy in anything. I suspect it created some controversy when CF Martin started using an X brace. Inovations, reguardless of whether they work or not will cause some people to talk. I don't see myself using curved laminated bracing, but I will enjoy watching this thread, and would enjoy playing a guitar with it. I wish you and Mr Irwin much success with your project.
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  #4  
Old 03-25-2012, 08:42 AM
laganlutherie laganlutherie is offline
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Hi Charles,
Yes Sam actually uses curved braces in the construction of his lyres, which have quite a large amount of strain proportional to their size, but we're not sure if the idea had been applied to a guitar. And yes your correct in saying, "there are two pieces of spruce, each full height, that are glued and clamped face-toface against a curved caul/form"
We've had students here use Carbon fibre braces on 12 Strings and Bouzoukis

Thanks for your input!
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Old 03-25-2012, 08:53 AM
arnelson arnelson is offline
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I've built a few with a very similar bent bracing pattern a few years ago. I too was amazed at how much more stiff the top was. My result was a very resonant guitar with a very unique tone. The tone was too non traditional for me though and I haven't done it since. There's also Trevor Gore who does bent bracing and just wrote a book about it. I hope you post some sound clips when you are done so I can see if your result was different than mine.
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Old 03-25-2012, 09:07 AM
charles Tauber charles Tauber is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arnelson View Post
My result was a very resonant guitar with a very unique tone. The tone was too non traditional for me though and I haven't done it since.
In my experience, there's the rub. From what I've seen, the further one deviates from conventional design, the further the tone tends to deviate from conventional "guitar sound". Chances are, however, one or more players will find that sound to be their preferred sound. If only one or two players find it "right", it won't be a very successful design. If many players find it "right" it will be very successful.
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Old 03-25-2012, 01:47 PM
gitnoob gitnoob is offline
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For me, a mental framework a la Somogyi helps a bit in terms of where you want increased stiffness, where you want more or less mass, etc.

It's a function of which vibrational modes you want to let ring or squelch and the frequencies you want to amplify.

To me, that top looks like it'd be too stiff for any monopole action, and it has too much longitudinal stiffness (where the spruce is already stiff).
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Old 03-25-2012, 02:19 PM
charles Tauber charles Tauber is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gitnoob View Post
To me, that top looks like it'd be too stiff for any monopole action, and it has too much longitudinal stiffness (where the spruce is already stiff).
Can't comment on the monopole action, but the longitudinal stiffness is exactly what I liked about it. It might counter the tendency of the guitar to fold into the soundhole from both the bridge and the neck. Might even address the deformation that necessitates neck resets.

However, it is all speculation: the proof is in the pudding and the proof may take decades before one can conclude much structurally, though one should be able to determine if one likes the sound or not in relatively short order, regardless of what the mono, duo or tadpoles do.
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Old 03-25-2012, 02:41 PM
gitnoob gitnoob is offline
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Yes, structurally it looks like it should be very robust.

But guitar players like their bass response, and my guess is that this guitar will have a fairly weak bass response. It'll probably sound lovely in the high-frequency registers, though.

I was looking at some old ladder-braced parlors just the other day. Sort of the opposite end of the spectrum -- virtually no added longitudinal stiffness.

Most of them had the usual belly, sound hole sinking, etc. But one of them didn't. 60+ years old and looked like new. The only differences? Reasonable sound hole reinforcement and a larger-than-normal bridge plate.

Sometimes, it doesn't take much. Stiff and light isn't necessarily a good thing. If it were, we'd all be using lattice bracing.
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Old 03-25-2012, 07:34 PM
Jules V. Jules V. is offline
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Default Thank you for sharing

What are the goals that you wish to achieve with this design; i.e., volume, projection, frequency response, type of musical application? Can you share the dimensions and materials as the build progresses towards said goals? It is hard to sail beyond the x brace paradigm for steel strings and classical designs for nylon gut guitars. It seems as though the proper course is to create an entirely new flavor of stringed instrument al la Smallman. Experimentation is necessary and I thank you for sharing your journey.
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Old 03-26-2012, 07:38 PM
jlwoodall jlwoodall is offline
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I tell you what, go ahead and finish it... send it to me and I'll give you a great written review. I get to keep the guitar of course.
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Old 03-29-2012, 01:29 PM
laganlutherie laganlutherie is offline
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Thanks for the comments so far everybody. We're very much of the thinking that you'll never know until you try!
We'll certainly keep you updated as the build progress. Although, Sam is so busy it may be a while before its finished.

I can't speak for him in what he's trying to achieve sonically with the tap tone. I don't think hes looking for a specific frequency response, but instead a good range of audible frequencies, and a specific double decay in the sustain that he normally goes for.
I'll have to get him to explain his thoughts...possibly in a video!
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Old 03-29-2012, 02:41 PM
Ned Milburn Ned Milburn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by laganlutherie View Post
Thanks for the comments so far everybody. We're very much of the thinking that you'll never know until you try!
We'll certainly keep you updated as the build progress. Although, Sam is so busy it may be a while before its finished.

I can't speak for him in what he's trying to achieve sonically with the tap tone. I don't think hes looking for a specific frequency response, but instead a good range of audible frequencies, and a specific double decay in the sustain that he normally goes for.
I'll have to get him to explain his thoughts...possibly in a video!
Some others have made questions as to what is the desired effect of the curved braces. I would also wonder how the designer wishes to manipulate the transmission of sound vibrations through the top, given that braces affect top resonance both through their stiffness and through their direct sound transmission.
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Old 03-29-2012, 02:59 PM
gitnoob gitnoob is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HCG Canada View Post
given that braces affect top resonance both through their stiffness and through their direct sound transmission.
Can you explain this "transmission" thing to me? I've seen that analogy before, and I don't really get it.

If anything, braces seem more like "anti-transmission" devices. Imagine a trampoline. If it's braced only at the rim, you can freely jump up and down anywhere. If you add braces within the rim, you create areas that aren't as bouncy.

Braces do "shape" how the top vibrates, though. Using the trampoline analogy, by X-bracing the trampoline, you create a trampoline that has 4 bouncy mini-trampolines (with a higher resonance frequency than the large trampoline). And if you don't couple the X to the rim, the trampoline will still bounce up and down if you jump on it near the center of the X. It'll also bounce from side-to-side and end-to-end.
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Old 03-29-2012, 06:21 PM
Ned Milburn Ned Milburn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gitnoob View Post
Can you explain this "transmission" thing to me? I've seen that analogy before, and I don't really get it.

If anything, braces seem more like "anti-transmission" devices. Imagine a trampoline. If it's braced only at the rim, you can freely jump up and down anywhere. If you add braces within the rim, you create areas that aren't as bouncy.

Braces do "shape" how the top vibrates, though. Using the trampoline analogy, by X-bracing the trampoline, you create a trampoline that has 4 bouncy mini-trampolines (with a higher resonance frequency than the large trampoline). And if you don't couple the X to the rim, the trampoline will still bounce up and down if you jump on it near the center of the X. It'll also bounce from side-to-side and end-to-end.
I don't know about the bouncy mini-trampolines ;-) but here is a try at explaining the use of the word transmission.

The sound wave (vibrational energy) initiated by the player, created in the string, transmit to the saddle & bridge, then transmit onto the vibrating top of the guitar where the air molecules are hit and the soundwave continues to be transmit to the listeners' ears.

So it is all about the transmission of vibrational energy from one substance to the next. The top of the guitar is what sends the sound vibration into the air.

Sound waves travel faster and more efficiently through dense objects rather than gases (air), so part of the function of braces on soundboards is also to transmit more volume of sound waves to all parts of the top faster than the soundwave can travel through air - virtually (but not precisely) instantaneously.

Then, "ping", the top is vibrating, and the audience is happy.

All due to the transmission of sound vibrations.
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