sunvalleylaw
Yep.
Or side your house. ;-)
really, I think they are cool.
really, I think they are cool.
Or side your house. ;-)
really, I think they are cool.
I just don't like to see spelling mistakes.
It still boggles my mind, a little, trying to imagine what acoustics are working in different guitars.
And that's trying to imagine the effects on the magnetic field around the strings.
I don't like going back to edit after someone else has posted after. That could be interpreted in predatory ways,
what annoyed me the most about HC, others posting their sick sense and deleting after.
I'm still not sure what guitar is your guitar to play and what kinds of bands you've been in, if any.
Not that it boggles my mind, needing all that input to even start feeling boggled.
For the longest time, talk about Stradavari's violins were all about the glue, his recipe.
But historic evidence now available from hiking friends, letters and diaries,
shows that Stradavari used walks out of town to visit ruins, bringing home old wood.
Damping in Glue
Glue used in lutherie is chosen for a number of different properties such as drying speed, shelf life and open time. A number of luthiers also consider that damping may be important when choosing glue as well. I know of no formal studies that attempt to measure damping in glue and also know of no studies that attempt to quantify perceived goodness of tone based on the glue used in construction. Such tests would be time-consuming and costly to perform.
My suspicion is that performing these experiments would not be an efficient use of resources. Glue makes up an extremely small fraction of the mass of a finished instrument and, based simply on hardness data, all glue typically used in lutherie is very likely to posses substantially lower damping values than the wood which comprises the bulk of the instrument. Both of these factors would likely render any measured difference in damping among wood glues to be irrelevant to perceived tonal differences in a finished instrument.
I thought about how many pieces of wood a guitar body needs.