#1
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neck wood opinion?
I plan to change out another neck and have a choice of Honduras mahogany vs maple. It's a 000 and will be Sitka over EIR when finished.
Which should yield the most sustain? Will be maple be a lot harder to carve? Thanks
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H&D 00-SP Eng/EIR RK RP2-626C, RP1-626C altered Cordoba Orchestra Fusion |
#2
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Maple carves very nicely, mahogany might be a better color match.
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Andersonville Tennessee Clinch River Instruments, White Oak O, 13 fret Nick Lucas, 1937 spec D-18 Martin 000-28 EC Gibson Les Paul Gibson 335 Dot Bunch of Strats Fender B-Bender Tele |
#3
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Color, weight and ease of carving, my choice would be mahogany.
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The standard you walk past is the standard you accept. |
#4
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Mahogany is a common choice for neck wood because of its easiness in carving, its stiffness, weight, and its dimensional stability across humidity changes.
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---- Ned Milburn NSDCC Master Artisan Dartmouth, Nova Scotia |
#5
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hog not maple
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#6
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Thanks for the replies !
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H&D 00-SP Eng/EIR RK RP2-626C, RP1-626C altered Cordoba Orchestra Fusion |
#7
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"Maple" is a vague term. There is hard maple, soft maple, birdseye maple, flamed maple... Harder maples are not easy to carve and figured maples can be a little trickier than non-figured maples.
Some maples are relatively very heavy and others much lighter in weight. Some maples are much stiffer than others. If you go with maple, I'd recommend that you use quarter sawn material - or laminate non-quartered material from several or more strips. There is also variation in weight of mahogany, but, generally, it works very easily and is far less dependent upon being quarter sawn or not. |
#8
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My choice is called medium flamed maple. The guys says it's much harder/stiffer than the mahogany I got last time. I like the mahogany neck he sent me, so I've about decided to repeat.
I just thought something different, might be well..different in a good way. I'm wood illiterate relying on what I read here in the forums. Thanks Charles
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H&D 00-SP Eng/EIR RK RP2-626C, RP1-626C altered Cordoba Orchestra Fusion |
#9
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Quote:
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#10
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A denser, stiffer neck will tend to produce more sustain.
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#11
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A heavier neck will change the balance of your guitar as well.
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Go for the Tone, George |
#12
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Thank you all for the responses !
Doug
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H&D 00-SP Eng/EIR RK RP2-626C, RP1-626C altered Cordoba Orchestra Fusion |
#13
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I've had a guitar that used both. 3 ply laminated neck with quartersawn birdseye maple sandwiched between mahogany outer layers (or it could be done the other way around). Very nice looking and something to consider.
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#14
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Quote:
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#15
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I'm sure he, and his many copy-cats, wouldn't have. But, that doesn't change my recommendation, particularly for an acoustic guitar.
Last edited by charles Tauber; 12-12-2013 at 05:48 PM. |