I was very taken by the Aranjuez Stage Nouveaux when I tried one about a year ago. Just recently I have been toying with doing something of that type in a year or two. Anyone know of plans that might suit? Basically a thin bodied nylon strung with a good un-amped sound. Versatile enough to play classical to jazz and singer accompaniment.
What helps with amping a nylon string? I seem to recall someone saying that braces are better left squared off if using electronic? No idea if that is true. Fan, falcate, ladder or lattice. That is yet another question.
Thanks.
Plans/hints for a thin body cutaway cross-over nylon guitar?
Re: Plans/hints for a thin body cutaway cross-over nylon gui
Hi Simon,
I have only built one stage nylon, it gets gigged with regularly and works well , no feedback and a very natural sound , it works well accousticaly, but there is always a compromise between making a responsive guitar and a stage guitar , I am yet to see one that is perfect at both, anyway for what it's worth have a look at the one I built and take from it what you will.
viewtopic.php?f=25&t=3726&hilit=nylon
cheers,
Paul.
I have only built one stage nylon, it gets gigged with regularly and works well , no feedback and a very natural sound , it works well accousticaly, but there is always a compromise between making a responsive guitar and a stage guitar , I am yet to see one that is perfect at both, anyway for what it's worth have a look at the one I built and take from it what you will.
viewtopic.php?f=25&t=3726&hilit=nylon
cheers,
Paul.
Paul .
Re: Plans/hints for a thin body cutaway cross-over nylon gui
Thanks for that. Very interesting looking. Looks like the philosophy there is to have an very rigid body? Does that imply that you went with a very thin top?
Re: Plans/hints for a thin body cutaway cross-over nylon gui
Hi Simon,
The top was around 2.6 mm from memory , it was swiss spruce ... the theory was more about only have the top working around the bridge , it had a dead back and stiffened sides all in an effort to try and reduce the compromise between responsiveness and feedback resistance, this guitar is used for contemprorary songs writing in a full band situation , as well as song writing.
The Customer loves it so I guess it does it's job.
Cheers,
The top was around 2.6 mm from memory , it was swiss spruce ... the theory was more about only have the top working around the bridge , it had a dead back and stiffened sides all in an effort to try and reduce the compromise between responsiveness and feedback resistance, this guitar is used for contemprorary songs writing in a full band situation , as well as song writing.
The Customer loves it so I guess it does it's job.
Cheers,
Paul .
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 36 guests