Just so you all can say that now you do know somebody. I have played a Cumpiano, well mostly just strummed it. There is in one on town that he built for Mario DaCosta but being that Mario owns it I will never see it. Bill explained that he is moving away from custom builds and is planning to just build what he wants and then offer them for sale. He does not do any extravagent work on his guitars, no inlays other than fret markers and sometimes not even them. He didn't even have a headstock logo on any of his guitars (8 or 10 of them) that I have seen. He does concentrate on paying attention to the details that make the guitars sound the way he wants them to. I can't honestly say I can remeber the sound properties of that guitar I played. I do remeber it felt quite nace and was very light.
As for Siminoff. I have read his book and have talked to him about his methods of tuning the pieces. I have strobe tuner that I bought through him and he is just about now to come out with a new book on using a tuner to test the frequencies of the parts. Ther is a misconception that he advocates that you "tune" every part to a particular frequency. He does not, if you did that then every guitar may sound just like the next (if it worked!). What he advocates is that you work towards making sure that each part and the then finished chamber all resonate at a frequency that falls in the A440Hz scale. He states that this is important because if you don't pay attenetion to this and the final chamber frequency is a few cents off of A440 then you get that "wobble" sound, just like when you are tuning using harmonics. This makes sence to me and is not so "out there" as most people think, IMHO. I too was underthe impression from his book that I should be looking for notes in each part of the instrument, until I talked to him. Anyway, he has promised me a copy of his new book as soon as he gets it from the publisher and that he will answer my questions on this method once I start to try it out, and I will. On another not, the frequecy of concernt pitch (right it is A440) tends to change over time. The 1920's Lloyd Loar mandos were appearantly built to C256 (C is presently 261.63hz, a full 1/4 tone higher) so Siminoff states that these mandos, played with newer instruments built to A440 will always sound a bit out of tune....probably OK for Bluegrass

, well for my Bluegrass playin' anyways. Oh ya, ther is a group appearantly seaking to change concert pitch yet again, but I can't remeber what they are suggesting, or why

. Memory like a steel trap I tell ya!
Shane