On Wed, 7 Jun 2017 at 10:17, Ed Minch wrote:
>
> On Jun 6, 2017, at 4:22 PM, yorkshireman@y... wrote:
>
> > Made with bog oak - 5,000 years old.
> >
> > He also said something about their being carbon fibre in it, and it
> having a floating neck. I have no idea what all that would do, But I
> thought I may know someone who does.
>
>
> Richard:
>
> Thanks - but I could not open the programme. Carbon fiber is the latest
> thing - there are several guitars with molded carbin fiber bodies (there
> are even 3-D printed ukulele’s). I have used carbon fiber rods glued into
> a neck to stabilize it. In the 70’s - 80’s there were molded fiberglass
> bodies that even Greg Allman played at the time - turns out they are hard
> to repair! I suspect the carbin fiber guitars will be the same.
>
> “Contemporary” guitars don’t have a huge market, with most buyer’s
> choosing traditional designs. There are a couple of guys making the
> floating neck. Thing to remember is that no one has done a double blind
> test on any of this stuff, and famously, a paper mache guitar was mistaken
> for wood 50 years ago. They all sound basically like a guitar.
>
> However, the one trend that is here to stay in lutherie is the CNC
> machine. Cutting an intricate inlay is fairly easy, but cutting the socket
> that fits exactly is a skill that few have mastered - not any more! And
> once you programme in the software to make a neck - then you can make a
> zillion of them - and they look just like handmade necks.
>
> It’s a different world
>
> Ed Minch
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> OldTools is a mailing list catering to the interests of hand tool
> aficionados, both collectors and users, to discuss the history, usage,
> value, location, availability, collectibility, and restoration of
> traditional handtools, especially woodworking tools.
>
> To change your subscription options:
> https://oldtools.swingleydev.com/mailman/listinfo/oldtools
>
> To read the FAQ:
> https://swingleydev.com/archive/faq.html
>
> OldTools archive: https://swingleydev.com/ot/
>
> OldTools@s...
>
--
Eric J. Smith
Trading as W.G. Joinery
ABN# 24 079 587 520
03 5784 9258
0411 264 272
PO BOX 353
Broadford Victoria
3658 Australia
|