Thanks everyone for your kind comments, it was a very enjoyable guitar to build. It took a long time as there was a lot of thought, research and discussion with my consultant before each step of the build. But it is nice when a plan comes together and produces the result that you had in mind.
Arnt, yes the Madrose is from Madinter, I bought a few sets some years ago when they were ridiculously cheap, I think about €75 a set, this is the first set I've built with though. Luisa there has just sorted me out a few more sets but they are now €130 each still a very good price for the quality of the wood.
Joshua, more classicals, well funny you should ask that, I sorted out a really nice set of cypress last night, and a set of European maple. So that's at least two, probably a whole lot more! Then again I know where I can get some BRW that went into the stores in 1840, so that might be ready to use, no I'll cut that into bridges and fingerboards. I'll send you some more MP3s, and a lot more questions!.
Steve,Waddy, they are Hannabach goldins medium/high tension. These were on Joshua's recommendation, apparently Brune recommends them for Torres guitars, both original and copy, as they are the nearet density to gut. I've got a gut set on order so I'll be able to compare.
Laurent, really it should have had a mismtched top joined under the G string, and a three piece back!
Howard, I've got quite a lot of P. orientalis, it's a top wood I really like. Like any spruce though it has to be judged on the individual piece. This sample was very stiff cross grain which allowed me to go thin. It is closest to good P.abies and should I believe be interchangeable with it. I believe a number of high end US steel string makers are using it and I would have no compunction in using it on a steel string, though as you say I think it's ideal for classical fan bracing. There is a common belief among museum curators here that many of the southern European instruments of the 18th and 19th century used P.orientalis. The European roads of the time were not that great and most trade around the Mediterranean would have been by sea. Boats bringing cloths and spices from Turkey and the near east would have brought the wood to Spain, Italy and Southern France. Much easier to bring heavy goods like wood by sea to Spain than cart German spruce over the Pyranees! Instrument makers of the time couldn't just phone their local tonewood seller, and P.abies/P.orientalis would just have been lumped together as 'Pine'. To my mind good samples are premium top wood.
Dave, Seville oranges, definitely! You should build a nylon string guitar, if only to play all of the Irish harp music.
Colin
_________________ I don't believe in anything, I simply make use of a set of reasonable working hypotheses.
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