I should note that I have no affliation with any company or maker noted below - nor their distributors etc...
I was just curious about you guys think about of the growing presence of carbon fibre (CF) and composite acoustics.
My interest was pricked by the stuff that rainsong are putting out which are starting to look more traditional (their original series (black ice, I think have all that crazy random triangle pattern). Further searching found instruments by Composite Acoustics and then in a recent copy of Acoustic Guitar magazine there is a new carbon fibre by Blackbird which looks really nice (their earlier stuff seem to be more travel guitars).
Now I have always like carbon fibre Steinbergers – and surprisingly the CF acoustics sound like, well, acoustic guitars. Purest will no doubt scoff – and may dismiss the previous use of alternate materials as having no impact on tone etc… CF lattice bracing. But I would bet that if CF was more accessible then others would use it. And why not? Apparently Rainsong need to have there CF shipped in dry ice – I am not sure why.
If exactly the same tone was delivered by some rare spruce just found in the farthest reaches of northern Canada and only able to be harvested by pixies on a full moon – then I am sure that people would be praising the ‘bell or piano like tone’, the ‘unparalleled projection’ and the ‘complex harmonics’ …blah blah blah. (BTW these qualities are all noted in various reviews of the rainsong). then there are also the advantages of stability etc...
I would love to do a blind test with some of these ‘experts’ without even telling them that a CF guitar is present.

It is interesting that we accept/request a given type of tone because that is what we are use to – for example few would argue that ladder bracing an instrument is substandard from a structural sense and from what we may consider a tonal sense – in terms of clarity, complexity etc.. but it sounds ‘great’ because that is what we have been conditioned to. And we are just ‘that’ tone we hear on old blues recordings etc… I love my queensland maple and spruce Maton – because it gives me that Tommy Emmanuel sound more than my other acoustics.
Another point is that it makes me realise all this agonizing over the thickness of this top, or the dovetail bolt-on arguments, Ebony is no good for classical bridges type arguments are questionable given that these guitars sound great and have no wood and are constructed in a completely different way (the rainsong has no bracing for example).
the rainsongs start at $1799 in AUS.
My rant.
