Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
The braces can also be ‘scalloped’ - where material is removed to lower their weight, without overly compromising their stiffness - which usually yields more volume - but sometimes less sustain.
Personally I wouldn’t chose a guitar on anything other than sound - the ‘theories’ about bracing characteristics are all well and good - but there are exceptions which disprove some the rules.
Steel strings on a standard classical would cause serious damage as they aren’t designed to handle the extra tension.
Historically, cheap guitars particularly 20's to 50's used ladder bracing. Lots of old time blues folk and country were produced with ladder braced guitars. It went out of fashion, but is undergoing a bit of a revival with 'vintage' inspired guitars.
V Bracing
Introduced by Taylor earlier this year. Their marketing hype claim it is a 'revolution' in guitar construction ( better intonation, better sustain)
I haven't played one so I can't really comment
There is also the position of the bracing to consider.
Martin and now making quite a few guitars with what they are marketing as "forward-shifted" bracing. As far as I know, it's actually a return to the bracing on the pre-war holy grail guitars. They changed the bracing around the end of WW2, but in recent years they have figured out that the pre-war configuration seems to sound better, and are making more guitars with it again.
Initially it was just the high spec vintage reissue type things that had the "forward-shifted" bracing, but it's worked it's way down the range, and it's now standard on the D18 (since 2012?), and now on the "re-imagined" D28.
What do makers like Lowden use? They have a different sound to a lot of the US makes. I would imagine there is something in the bracing that plays a part in that.
As others have said though, just find a guitar you like the sound of.
Don't worry my first two criteria for any guitar are how comfortable it is to play and how good it sounds, but I've always wondered because I never knew anything about bracing!
Awesome responses!
We have to consider what bracing does- which is to assist maintaining structural integrity whilst allowing the string to excite the soundboard/body system.
I've played a few guitars with different brace patterns- none have been an improvement over X bracing.
Even a traditional X Bracing pattern can be fucked up too- I know someone who decided to laminate their braces with strips of spruce and rosewood and then scalloped.
It looked absolutely amazing and he did a great job at making it look pro.
It also managed to overly stiffen the instrument and it killed the sustain completely and made the resonant frequency very high, so it sounded plinky.
X Brace with traditional materials is a solution that does not require overthinking imho.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
Auto-Bounce by Tom Salta
Dreamhost Web Hosting
Mentioning Lowden they use an A brace design, which Fylde claim to have designed in the late 70's.