Started this discussion. Last reply by Chris Andrada Mar 28, 2021.
Started this discussion. Last reply by Robert Filippi Apr 9, 2010.
Started Mar 20, 2009
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Best regards,
Bob
Overholtzer? That's a blast from the past. I still have his book and it is certainly the benchmark for explicitness of detail. From what I'm told, he was quite an interesting character with a machinist's background (as his methods show). What made you decide to use that bracing?
I haven't made a steel string guitar since about 1986. Way too damned fiddley in setting up the neck right, the action movement after stringing, etc. I do miss dressing them up, though. The classical community is so conservative with regard to aesthetics. Besides, I'm finding it quite enough challenge to wring out the best tone I can out of a classical guitar. It's a study unto itself. I am in awe of anyone who can really get great sound out of a dreadnaught, then turn around and do it again with a 00 or a parlor guitar.
Cheers,
Bob
I'm very interested to hear how this guitar turns out. I would only caution that Overholtzer gave guidelines for top thickness that were pretty broad, 1/16" to 3/32" (1.6 to 2,4mm). It was Bouchet's practice, and now Marin's, to leave the top at 2.2mm for the same sort of 5-fan arrangement and make adjustments internally after assembly and stringing up.
The second caution regards the bridge. It is absolutely MASSIVE. Way out of bounds relative to anything any other builder has ever put on a classical guitar and a real cause for concern. Gotta remember that 1.) Art was a machinist by training and 2.) he was German, which means "more massive" = "more durable", but not necessarily better acoustically and he built during a time when there was far less information readily available and far less communication among luthiers. Ergo, no tempering of the imagination. The wings of the bridge are 50% thicker that the thickest I've seen, the length is 30mm longer than the longest, and the string spacing is another 5.5 mm wider than the usual 58mm (he had very big hands). If you're interested, I can provide you with dimensions for a Marin bridge. It's dimensionally at the outer bounds for mainstream luthiers but still petite by comparison.
Please let me know how it goes with this one.
Cheers,
Bob
Michael
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