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PostPosted: Fri Oct 05, 2007 6:19 pm 
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Brazilian Rosewood
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[quote=Howard Klepper]BTW, if anyone doesn't know how to make a "long compass," here is a very helpful page from Jon Sevy. This is a nifty and simple jig for drawing large radii. [/quote]

Long Compass
Pretty Dang Cool! I assume one just sets the centerline of the pencil to the chord height from the centerline of the pins. You could do any radius you like! Never seen it before! Thanks Howard!

Look like there's a jig to be made!

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 12:45 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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The dome is one constant radius or sphereical segment, but because the shape of the body is not one common width or the same distance from the center of the dome everywhere, the intersection of the body with the dome has an ever changing elevation. The closer to the center of the dome the taller the side profile. The further from the center of the dome the shorter the side profile.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 4:41 am 
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Brazilian Rosewood
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Our Traditional series features the same 25' radius prepared into the braces, but the sides are left flat for a more traditional build style. This build style tends to have a more traditional tonal character, emphasizing a bit more bass.

What do they mean by "left flat"? Cut to a straight taper before bending and then not trimmed? Trimmed so that the top edge of the sides is in one plane? Something else? I'm having trouble seeing how this doesn't describe a pretty weird construction method, that would put some odd kinks into the top.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 4:55 am 
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Mahogany
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[QUOTE=Howard Klepper] Our Traditional series features the same 25' radius prepared into the braces, but the sides are left flat for a more traditional build style. This build style tends to have a more traditional tonal character, emphasizing a bit more bass.

What do they mean by "left flat"? Cut to a straight taper before bending and then not trimmed? Trimmed so that the top edge of the sides is in one plane? Something else? I'm having trouble seeing how this doesn't describe a pretty weird construction method, that would put some odd kinks into the top.[/QUOTE]

I could be very wrong but the way that read to me is that they cut the kerfed lining flat to the top instead of having a little angle on it to reflect the radius of the top.

That would in turn make the edges of the top stiffer, which, from what I've read in the archive and am yet to experience, would give the guitar a bassier sound.

Coule be completely wrong though given I'm a build virgin...


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 5:03 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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Howard it is no surprise that I agree.

I believe most that do not sand the dome into their sides/linings/ blocks leave the top side of the rim flat, install the linings flush to the top edge of the rim, then forcibly clamp the dome shaped top so that the perimeter of the top meets the linings causing the dome to be deformed at the perimeter. Now we are only talking about deforming the dome shape 1/16" or so. How ever that 1/16" is adding stress that the shape is trying to resist, and that stress never goes away. The worst place is at the waist.

As others have said, several major builders build this way. I my self do not wish to add the added stress on the top by deforming the shape of the dome I induced by radial bracing. So I sand the dome into rim, linings, blocks and all so that when I lay my top down to glue up. the top contacts the linings and blocks without having to pull them down.

If I did not want to sand the dome into the linings I would at least sand the rim till the sides intersected the dome everywhere then add my linings. Then you would have only about 1/64" that needed to drawn down during glue up.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 6:07 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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Hesh I built two that way as well back several years ago. Neither have failed. I did not notice ant difference in bass response. But did not notice is lack of response either.

I doubt there are may that have had failure issues doing the flat pull. but to me it is kind of like using a set of sides you have under bent and forcing them to fit the mold. It is just unneeded stress IMHOP.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 8:49 am 
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Koa
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     I think the stress from using flat rims would be short lived, eventualy the wood would  relax and assume the shape it was formed ( or deformed) into  . Jody


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 1:22 am 
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Micheal - Do you sand the sides in the shape mold (with heel and neck blocks but no linings) with the radius dish and then glue in linings slightly proud of the newly sanded edges of the sides and then sand the linings down to the edges of the sides? 


Thanks,


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 1:24 am 
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Thanks, Michael!


 


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 1:35 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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Yes! I sand the sides, while in the mold to real close to the dome. Install the linings the finish the sanding. This makes my rim fit the dome pretty close to perfect. When I lay my top dopwn on my sanded rim the linings sides and blocks meet the top everywhere (baring some minor movment of the braced top.


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 7:27 pm 
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Mahogany
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Ok, so not satisfied with the pigeon/cat ratio of my initial innocent-sounding question, I have another.

So, we have our radiussed top, which for argument's sake we'll say is attached to radius sanded kerfed lining and sides.

So let's now introduce a cutaway.

Is it generally acepted to radius the cutaway in relation to the overall radius of the top, or are the edges of the cutaway radiussed inwards to suggest a secondary mini-radius only affecting the area of the cutaway?

Uh, ok even I don't understand what I wrote.

Think of it this way - take your sides/ head and tail blocks in their mold with the linings proud. Rub the whole lot in a radius dish covered in sandpaper. Now all the radiussed edges are 'correct' as per a perfect dome covering the top of the guitar. However, the bit inside the curve of the cutaway will at one point be radiussed so that the lining would have to angle the opposite way to normal.

I hope I'm making sense here...


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 11:06 pm 
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I am missing your point Dave .. the cutaway area has the same radii as the rest of the top - it is highest at the deepest part of the cutaway (closest to the top of the dome), and falls away from there - I am about to bind three of them (florentines), and I make the binding piece for the cutaway extra tall, then plane in a rise in the bottom edge before installing as the piece is small/tight enough that is doesnt want to bend to accomodate the curvature of the binding ledge - you will almost always get a gap at the deepest part of the cutaway as the binding tends to want to lean forward, away from being tight in the ledge.

Maybe in order to see your issue, go back to Michaels cookie cutter analogy in a sphere - just add a cutaway to the cutter - nothing really changes as far as the dome is concerned - its kind of like a deeper waist area thats all.

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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 12:28 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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in your minds eye imagine a dowel sticking through both poles of a sphere. kind of like the rotational points on a globe

This is the center axis of the dome. Now take the cookie cutter with the shape of a cutaway guitar body and slice down with this pole sticking parallel to sides of the cookie cutter and centered in the middle of the area inside the cookie cutter. the only difference in the cutaway make is how close to the center axis any point of the cutaway is. The closer to the pole a parallel edge the tall that parallel edge is.

That is the only change that happens. There is never a radial change in a spherical segment.


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 1:20 am 
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Mahogany
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It was tha cookie cutter that put the funny image in my head in the first place

Perhaps I can try to ascii art this a little.


Here's an unbent side:

---------------------------------\_____________

-----------------------------------------------

we'll come back to that later but it helps to have the shape in your head for what I'm getting at.

Ok so now we'll have a non cutaway shape:

    ||
__||__
/      \
\      /
/ xx \
|        |
\______/

The Xs there are the 'top' of the radius dome, right? If you cookie-cut that shape from the surface of a sphere, those Xs are approximately the furthest from a flat tabletop if you put the cookiecut shape down onto a flat table.

Therefore the lining and sides are angled slightly so that the edges are 'taller' on the inside than the outside. I think we're all together so far...

Now lets mix it up a bit with a cutaway

    ||
__||
/    \/\
\      /
/ xx \
|        |
\______/

Note that bit on the inside of the cutaway that I highlighted in red?

If we're sticking on our domed top - that bit should, and correct me when I'm inevitably wrong here, but should be angled away from the Xs. Or to put it another way, whereas the lining around the rest should be radiussed so that the innermost part is slightly taller than the sides, here, it must either follow the same rules, and provide additional stress around the glue line (the angle will be wrong as opposed to a non-cutaway), OR it must be angled along the lining so that the bit nearer the xx's on the diagram is taller than the bit at the tip of the cutaway.(?)

That would, unless I'm way off, also mean angling the sides (realistically) so that instead of that nice straight side I illustrated back up there ^^ you end up with something like

-----------------\____/------

-----------------------------

Note that's very exaggerated (the limits of ascii art I'm afriad) but you get the idea.

So where's my thinking going wrong here?

It was mentioned earlier in the thread that it's only a worry if we're adding stress along a glue line, but short of some clever shaping of the sides, I don't see how that's avoidable in the case of a cutaway.

The usual disclaimer about my ignorance applies here...


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 1:23 am 
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Mahogany
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::edit:: Oops, looks like courier new isn't a monospace font after all

Uh, if it's impossible to recreate the above with imagination, I'll do some drawing and scan em...

PS the above post was started before you wrote your explanation MichaelP, it just took me a while to type it all up...


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 1:44 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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I am creating a 3d model with a Sphere and cookie cutter it will be a bit but I will post when done


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 1:54 am 
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Brazilian Rosewood
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[QUOTE=MichaelP] I am creating a 3d model with a Sphere and cookie cutter it will be a bit but I will post when done[/QUOTE]

Michael,

Do we all get a slice when you've done it? Yum, Yum

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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 3:51 am 
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:02 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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Ok! here are the pics
The first two are a side view and isometric view showing a guitar shape and a transparent sanding dish. I decrease the bowl radius a bunch to make what happens easily visible
]

Next is an isometric view of the rim sanded. I made the rim thich to eliminate drawing all components. Followed by side and neck end views The red is the surface left by sanding.


Notice the waist is the tallest part of the profile because it is the closest area to the center axis of the dome. The neck and heel occupy the equal elevations but all other point are subject to their position of intersection with the dome or sphere. Now this is exaggerated. by the small radius I used.


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:21 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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How many of you are suprised tat you body gets taller in the middle?


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:25 am 
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Old Growth Brazilian
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[QUOTE=MichaelP] How many of you are suprised tat you body gets taller in the middle? [/QUOTE]

How many of you are surprised that your body gets taller in the middle?

It is not that I can not spell it is that my keyboard seems to not record my every key stroke... That's my story and I am sicking to it


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:26 am 
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Michael,
Do you flatten the area under the fretboard extension or leave the SR?

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PostPosted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:31 am 
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[QUOTE=MichaelP] [QUOTE=MichaelP] How many of you are suprised tat you body gets taller in the middle? [/QUOTE]

How many of you are surprised that your body gets taller in the middle? [/QUOTE]

TALLER?!?!? I'm surprised! Since I turned 40, my body has been getting WIDER in the middle!!

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