Seems germane to the discussion - Technology used to solve a problem with musical instrument consistency and make it reproducible. Banjos, I know, but the use of technology is there all the same.
http://infohouse.p2ric.org/ref/16/15968.htm
Seems germane to the discussion - Technology used to solve a problem with musical instrument consistency and make it reproducible. Banjos, I know, but the use of technology is there all the same.
http://infohouse.p2ric.org/ref/16/15968.htm
I would love to see a carbon fiber bowlback. Because the structure would be fundamentally different. If I understand it correctly, you can make a carbon fiber one piece bowl. No ribs.
I would wait in line money in hand for one of those.
My future nutrition will hopefully never consist of pills, and I will hopefully never present my wife with a bouquet of plastic flowers.
I am the proud owner of a Mix A4 (the one in my avatar), and am delighted with my purchase. It has great sound, fine tone, tons of volume - and is totally immune to the vagaries of living in an environment where temperatures are routinely north of 40 degrees C and humidity in the 90s is not in the least unusual. With all that and a great Schertler C-Dyn installed internally, I got a great custom instrument at a very reasonable price.
ron
hey i know this is tough, on the 'silent' internet LOL
but id love examples or comaprisions to other known bench mark mandos for volume in particular or even your subjective perceptions
id particularly like to know if you have ever played side by side with a rigel a (i know yours is a A4, so not really apples and apples)
be curious too about bass response
and id like to know if youve ever played a mix F 5
New mix coming in a week or so. Been almost a year but will give you the details soon. Black and beautiful and so long coming I just am bubbling over with anxt...spelling?,.....
I love the beauty of wood. Some luthiers are using CF for braces. I could see this becoming common but personally I wouldn't buy an all CF instrument. The durability isn't a factor for me and since I'm not a pro musician nor do I travel with an instrument so the consistency in changing weather conditions doesn't much matter. Louder isn't important to me since what I have is already loud. A more beautiful tone or being easier to play would matter. If CF someday beats wood on those points I might reconsider but I doubt it. Even then it would at best be in addition to my wooden one(s).
angst
we all get this with an instrument on the way
not only paying for it, but damage, will it be as great as i hope,
or, the ultimate angst, explaining it to she who must be obeyed "SWMBO"
Unfortunately I don't have access to other good mandolins to do comparisons, and have to be content with what I have. But Cafe member and respected blues mandolinist Bert Deivert used my A4 for a couple of live shows while he was visiting, and speaks highly of my Mix. I don't know anyone who has played an F-model Mix, but I don't think there will be much difference between it and my A, any more than there is much difference between comparable wooden A and F models.
Oh, and Steve - that key on your keyboard marked 'shift' would help the rest of us read what you write, if only you'd use it. :-)
ron
For home furnitures, I love woods, although they are more generally expensive and demand more care.
I could not stand the view of glass / metal / plastic materials, I feel no warmth in these materials.
For mandolins / guitars, I also love the sound of wooden instruments.
But .... if CF instruments can sound good (I say "can" because it also depends on my playing skills) and can be made available much cheaper to large number of people, I will not hesitate to buy them.
Imagine a CF mandolin (for 200$ when produced in high volume) with the quality of a (1000$-2000$) traditional mandolin, I could not resist this. Too bad, they are still too expensive at this time.
I recently played a very nice Mix carbon-fiber F-5 and was sorely tempted to buy it. If I were touring constantly, facing a bunch of summer music camps and festivals, or were planning to live in a hot, humid climate, it would have been a no-brainer.
The thing was plenty loud and had a very pleasing, balanced tone across all four courses. Lots of punch and clarity in the highs and mids and a warm , dark bark on the chops.
I would be pleased with that tone on any F-5 style mandolin, and to my ear it compared very favorably in every respect with solid-wood instruments in the same price range ($4K–$5K). I doubt I could have picked it out as "the plastic one" in a blind sound comparison.
There's no getting around the aesthetics of the thing, though. The shape and details and general fit-and-finish are all really well executed, but I'm not much of a fan of that carbon mesh look--in any color.
Still, if my needs had justified it, I would have happily overlooked that aspect in favor of a great-sounding, super-stable, quality instrument that would be reliable and consistent in any weather conditions.
Just one guy's opinion
www.guitarfish.net
Right behind JeffD in that queue for a CF bowl-back but I'd be glad to see carbon fibre cases become affordable as a starter.
Eoin
"Forget that anyone is listening to you and always listen to yourself" - Fryderyk Chopin
Since the question was specific, it deserves a concise answer: No.
CF has its uses, and we may find more, but it's difficult to work with, destroys your tools, and you don't want to breath the dust. There are also issues of materials-compatibility (wood fretboard vs. CF neck), and repairability. So, as components, sure, but I don't expect fully CF mandolins to ever replace the sound, aesthetic, character and pure mojo of wood.
Joe
Joseph Campanella Cleary
Campanella Stringed Instruments
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A Loar-era Gibson or a Stradivari violin is musical, artistic, historical and cultural phenomenon. They're singular, rare, and even modern science can't fully explain their musical and cultural impact. When you play or study one of these great violins or mandolins, it changes you.
I just don't see CF instruments reaching that broad and deep level of success--that's the measure, not simply whether CF can be made into a viable or professional-grade instrument.
Last edited by joec; Jun-21-2013 at 3:36pm.
Joseph Campanella Cleary
Campanella Stringed Instruments
I will grant you that a new instrument cannot have historical significance. Nor can readily available instruments be rare. The question to me is whether CF instruments may one day have THE SOUND. For some people, THE SOUND will always be "approximating a Loar", but maybe not always for everyone. Some people seem to be liking what they are getting from CF.
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Seems to me that new technologies in music are first disparaged. Or at least in the 20 th century. It will take a musician or two to find what the carbon fibre works best at: look at Monroe with the Loar, Charlie Christian with his guitar, muddy waters, Luther Perkins etc. someone may pick one up and find exactly what it's best at. I'll go further to say it will be someone we've not heard of yet. Look at the moog synth as well. (Many if you hate synths, that's fine but it gets used a lot).
JBovier ELS; Epiphone MM-50 VN; Epiphone MM-40L; Gretsch New Yorker G9310; Washburn M1SDLB;
Fender Nashville Deluxe Telecaster; Squier Modified Vintage Cabronita Telecaster; Gretsch 5420T; Fender Tim Armstrong Hellcat: Washburn Banjo B9; Ibanez RB 5string; Ibanez RB 4 string bass
Pedalboard for ELS: Morley Cry baby Miniwah - Tuner - EHX Soul Food Overdrive - EHX Memory Toy analog Delay
Fender Blues Jr Tweed; Fender Greta;
I wonder if they had this discussion when Loar tried to make electrically amplified instruments...
Musica mulcet ad animam.
Musica placet aurium.
Musica aedificat corda
The Rainsong I mentioned sounds perfect for bluegrass in the hands of someone else, but when I played a couple of them I didn't particularly care for the sound. It was good, but it lacked overtones that I wanted to hear. Kind of too clean a sound. Reminded me of how my ears didn't like the clean sound of CDs for years but preferred the noise and inconsistency of vinyl records. But, of course, that preference changed over time.
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