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#1 (permalink) |
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TDPRI Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Indiana
Age: 24
Posts: 75
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Fretless guitars/bass question...
I was wondering, if there are no frets on a guitar or bass, wouldn't the wood where the string contacts it eventually destroy the neck? I've never seen one in person, so I don't know exactly how that works.
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#2 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 418
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Short answer, yes.
Most manufacturers use harder fingerboards (ebony) and thicker, tougher finishes to combat this, but with time and are hard playing, wear does occur.
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"Go Team Venture!" |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Aldergrove, British Columbia,Canada
Age: 40
Posts: 2,798
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I read about him years ago. He was using stainless steel for the fingerboard.
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There's nothing wrong with a proper repair... "I don't scratch no guitars." John Lee Hooker, when asked to carve his signature into an old acoustic. |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 361
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Quote:
I've seen some fretless bass players who do their vibrato as you would on a fretted instrument, pushing/pulling the strings across the neck. Theoretically, this would cause the most wear. Vibrato that moves with the axis of the neck, as with most of the "viol" instruments, seems to make more sense and would minimize wear, I'd think. I wonder how much wear actually occurs from the string simply being pressed against the neck and then released. Interesting question... |
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Meister
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Quote:
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It is never too late to be on time.... |
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#11 (permalink) |
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TDPRI Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Beverly, MA
Age: 32
Posts: 60
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My fretless bass has missing laquer and has some grooves but the neck isn't destroyed, it plays fine. It's only noticeable when you play it, not from afar. It is only in certain areas too. I think it does come from vibrato and using round wound strings. I'm thinking of sanding and relaquering it sometime in the future if It does becomes noticable and I get some extra free time.
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"Anyone can make the simple complicated. Creativity is making the complicated simple." Charles Mingus |
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#13 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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That has more to do with scale length and radius than fingerboard wear. Strads were originally baroque instruments, strung with gut. The radii were flatter to accomodate chord-type playing. When the violin family graduated to more virtuostic playing with steel strings in the 19th Century, is became common to replace the neck on Strads and other early violins
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"Turn it up and it doesn't need any reverb." - Danny Gatton www.dannygatton.info Tiger Town Aces - Music That Bites Back In Redd we trust! Free Bill Kirchen! If lawyers are disbarred and clergymen defrocked, doesn't it follow that electricians can be delighted, musicians denoted, cowboys deranged, models deposed, tree surgeons debarked, and dry cleaners depressed? |
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#14 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Milan, Italy
Posts: 1,278
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Quote:
Right. Plus, the neck was dismounted and re-glued with a more accentuated angle respect to the body, to resist to higher tension strings (remember hat the pitch raised from A=400 to 440 in some 150 years), and the new fingerboards were way loger than the original ones to allow the violinist play in 2nd/3rd position: the baroque players used to stay on 1st position only. So, when you see a Stradivarius (or, pardon, Stradivari in correct Italian) remember that you look to a higly modded instrument thru the decades. Like our tele's eheheh...
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FraKo-the-gnome 1/2 Member of the Double Bound Telecaster Owners Club |
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#15 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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All that Vivaldi stuff can be played in first position? Too cool.
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"Turn it up and it doesn't need any reverb." - Danny Gatton www.dannygatton.info Tiger Town Aces - Music That Bites Back In Redd we trust! Free Bill Kirchen! If lawyers are disbarred and clergymen defrocked, doesn't it follow that electricians can be delighted, musicians denoted, cowboys deranged, models deposed, tree surgeons debarked, and dry cleaners depressed? |
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#17 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Milan, Italy
Posts: 1,278
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AFA I know, yes. They seldom overcame the high E (octave on the higher string), and the violin at those times was NOT kept firmly betweeen the jaw and the neck. It was simply put on the clavicula, so that the left thumb couldn't move to let the violin stay in the player's hand. The exploration of the higher register started in the 19th century, with Paganini, Joachim etc.: that's why the original baroque violins (and their recent repro's) have short fingerboards.
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FraKo-the-gnome 1/2 Member of the Double Bound Telecaster Owners Club |
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