falcate nylon "cross-over" style
Posted: Fri Nov 04, 2016 11:20 pm
It has been a while since I posted any of my own guitar builds here. This is the most recent one – the fifth guitar that I have completed. It is my first nylon string, and my first try of falcate bracing.
I actually started this guitar a few years ago as a L-00 steel-string project. I had a disaster due to my complete disregard of humidity control in the workshop at that time. Before I even finished it the original bunya top caved in and cracked when it got a bit dry. I shelved it for quite a while and built another two guitars before reconsidering what to do with this one. By now I had a few spare steel-strings lying around the house so I thought this small body might make a good nylon-string instrument instead.
The back and sides (originally from Tim Spittle) were fine to re-use. I teamed it up with a new European Spruce top. I had also been thinking and reading a bit about Selmer-Maccaferri guitars and obtained some plans from the Charle shop in Paris – so you will see a bit of that influence here. Finally, I had obtained the Gilet/Gore books so I was keen to give falcate bracing a try. This one is certainly not a classical guitar. Perhaps in the category of a "cross-over" nylon string. The nut width is 1.75 inches, the fingerboard is radiused and the neck profile is more like a steel-string than a classical. Bound fingerboard and semi-hemispherical fret ends (my first try of this - not too hard, but certainly takes a bit of time). I stole that "snooker-cue" treatment of the backstrap/neck from Nigel Forster's guitars (nice idea Nigel). 18-hole bridge gives a good break angle over the saddle and it looks much neater not to be tying a knot across the lower part of the bridge. I haven’t done any testing of the plate frequencies yet. I put in capacity to add side mass, but haven’t got into that black magic yet.
Here are a few pics of the neck joint method, using the jig from Luthier's cool tools, which I really like:
http://www.luthierscooltools.com/Tools.htm#Bolt-on Finishing is still a weak point of my building. This is a hand applied satin oil finish. I quite like the matt and rustic look, but it is not as slick as some would prefer. Maybe I will perfect that in the next build. There are always new challenges to look forward to…….
Here it is hanging with two of my other builds.
In a nutshell it is Blackheart sassafras and European spruce. Indian rosewood bridge and fingerboard. Bindings and headstock faceplate are bocote, which is very close in colour to the EIR, but with more interesting grain and figure. Neck joint is a bolt-on butt joint with bolt-down fingerboard extension (so a completely removable neck). Bracing is falcate pattern, sitka spruce. Scale length 24.7 inch, 13 fret neck and zero fret. I actually started this guitar a few years ago as a L-00 steel-string project. I had a disaster due to my complete disregard of humidity control in the workshop at that time. Before I even finished it the original bunya top caved in and cracked when it got a bit dry. I shelved it for quite a while and built another two guitars before reconsidering what to do with this one. By now I had a few spare steel-strings lying around the house so I thought this small body might make a good nylon-string instrument instead.
The back and sides (originally from Tim Spittle) were fine to re-use. I teamed it up with a new European Spruce top. I had also been thinking and reading a bit about Selmer-Maccaferri guitars and obtained some plans from the Charle shop in Paris – so you will see a bit of that influence here. Finally, I had obtained the Gilet/Gore books so I was keen to give falcate bracing a try. This one is certainly not a classical guitar. Perhaps in the category of a "cross-over" nylon string. The nut width is 1.75 inches, the fingerboard is radiused and the neck profile is more like a steel-string than a classical. Bound fingerboard and semi-hemispherical fret ends (my first try of this - not too hard, but certainly takes a bit of time). I stole that "snooker-cue" treatment of the backstrap/neck from Nigel Forster's guitars (nice idea Nigel). 18-hole bridge gives a good break angle over the saddle and it looks much neater not to be tying a knot across the lower part of the bridge. I haven’t done any testing of the plate frequencies yet. I put in capacity to add side mass, but haven’t got into that black magic yet.
Here are a few pics of the neck joint method, using the jig from Luthier's cool tools, which I really like:
http://www.luthierscooltools.com/Tools.htm#Bolt-on Finishing is still a weak point of my building. This is a hand applied satin oil finish. I quite like the matt and rustic look, but it is not as slick as some would prefer. Maybe I will perfect that in the next build. There are always new challenges to look forward to…….
Here it is hanging with two of my other builds.