Soundboard - Engelmann Spruce
Back and Sides - Brazilian Rosewood
Neck - Brazilian Mahogany
Bracing - radial, spruce and carbon fibre
Bridge - Brazilian Rosewood
Finish - Nitro




Not sure if you're serious with your critique or it's tounge in cheek. My ten cents worth:kpcart wrote:besides the brazillian rosewood (poor cut though) and mahogany, everything else about this guitar is untraditional from Spanish classical guitar building. ie choice of back strip, lack of purfling detail, bracing choice, soundboard wood choice, tuner button and roller colour choice, rosette style, oversized bridge (I hope it has not bridge plate underneath), lack of 19th fet (which is traditionally cut in half have the whole soundhole), and lastly the most dreaded of all "shudder,,,errr" a nitro finish on a classical!!.. I wonder if body resonance pitch and soundboard to back interval were considered, which is most important for a Spanish classical guitar. makes me wonder what else hides inside. Apologies, but not all critique has to be good. looking at this I just think, why??? more research please.
The story of how Martin acquired this, actually quite beautiful, BRW (and the parquetry back strip) is quite touching. viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6688&p=77596#p77596besides the brazillian rosewood (poor cut though) and mahogany,
Well, I don't think martin set out to create an historical replica. Anyway, from memory the body shape is a straight copy of a Torres with no alterations. Shocking.everything else about this guitar is untraditional from Spanish classical guitar building.
soundboard wood choice,
Wait til you hear what he paid for them...tuner button and roller colour choice,
Agree, but each their ownrosette style,
Straight from the Torres plans I believe. And with a Marty radial CF design there is no bridge plate unless I'm mistaken.oversized bridge (I hope it has not bridge plate underneath)
.and lastly the most dreaded of all "shudder,,,errr" a nitro finish on a classical!!.
Well, it's a beauty of a guitar to play. Which is the ultimate test, imho. I'd rather a good-sounding, easy to play, non-traditional guitar, than something that looks the part and sounds like shite.I wonder if body resonance pitch and soundboard to back interval were considered, which is most important for a Spanish classical guitar.
So you feel that us builders should keep making everything 'traditional'?kpcart wrote:everything else about this guitar is untraditional from Spanish classical guitar building
Consider how you would feel, if you put in over 100 hours of painstaking effort, then bravely offered up your handiwork for the scrutiny of your peers, only to receive an epic list of criticisms from a person who has built one guitar.kpcart wrote:besides the brazillian rosewood (poor cut though) and mahogany, everything else about this guitar is untraditional from Spanish classical guitar building. ie choice of back strip, lack of purfling detail, bracing choice, soundboard wood choice, tuner button and roller colour choice, rosette style, oversized bridge (I hope it has not bridge plate underneath), lack of 19th fet (which is traditionally cut in half have the whole soundhole), and lastly the most dreaded of all "shudder,,,errr" a nitro finish on a classical!!.. I wonder if body resonance pitch and soundboard to back interval were considered, which is most important for a Spanish classical guitar. makes me wonder what else hides inside. Apologies, but not all critique has to be good. looking at this I just think, why??? more research please.
+1 on that.kiwigeo wrote: Not sure if you're serious with your critique or it's tounge in cheek.
Drinking DB Draught tonight?Nick wrote:
Nice axe Martin or should that be "fore sooth, tis much a thing of rare eloquence and beauty good sir."
...but only the neo ones...kiwigeo wrote:Trevor calls his classicals "neo-classicals".
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