I think you are on to something there. But you would have to analyze at least two relatively similar instruments - one with generally accepted great tone and one with generally accepted bad tone - and see what the obvious differences are. You might also compare the results of two very good sounding but dissimilar steels to see what they have in common and what is different.Tom Wolverton wrote:But the big problem (I think) is there is no criteria for “good toneâ€. The outputs from a FEM model would generate a lot of data that would leave me scratching my head saying “OK, what does all of this really tell us?â€. This could be quite frustrating.
However, if you wanted to examine cabinet drop or thermal-elastic changes to the guitar’s tuning, a FEM model could do that fairly easily.
Emmons 13 secret’s for sound
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- Fred Treece
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I personally know of four guys, Bill Ferguson, Larry Bullock, Jack Daughtery, Chet Gibson, all of whom owned or own Emmons guitars and every one sounds "Heavenly"! Now, I had a red one, which was the worst playing , sounding no good guitar I ever owned, and I've owned plenty. I once heard Ed Fulawka say that the neck of a steel guitar had nothing to do with tone, or sustain. I also owned a S 10 Emmons once which played and sounded wonderful, it had Buddy's signature underneath.
If you were to go to any major guitar mfg. company, pick thru 50 guitars hanging on the rack, built and handled by the same techs, you might find two, three, maybe four that were "special". You knew the minute you laid hands on it.
Same is true with steel guitars,people, cars, etc. No two pieces of wood are alike, even if they came from the same tree.
Harold Flynn, who worked for Shot Jackson back in the day, told me that Shot would "tune His steel bodies, and even His amps. If the piece didn't resonate, He might take a little material off, here or there, til He got it like He wanted. Just sayin! LP
If you were to go to any major guitar mfg. company, pick thru 50 guitars hanging on the rack, built and handled by the same techs, you might find two, three, maybe four that were "special". You knew the minute you laid hands on it.
Same is true with steel guitars,people, cars, etc. No two pieces of wood are alike, even if they came from the same tree.
Harold Flynn, who worked for Shot Jackson back in the day, told me that Shot would "tune His steel bodies, and even His amps. If the piece didn't resonate, He might take a little material off, here or there, til He got it like He wanted. Just sayin! LP
Music is probably the most "spiritual of mankinds emotions, and when practised with a pure heart, can lead one into the presence of God, who invented it. Lonnie Portwood
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On this subject...what would Buddy Emmons do? From first hand recollection he would simply rake across either or both necks unamplified and would be able to tell how good the guitar would respond tone wise..like one mantra says everything matters...not every prewar flathead was magical..oh but those that were...deep in the well for old Emmons D-10. Not all are created equal..but the arrow and the Indian is also pretty applicable
Old Emmons D-10's & Wrap Resound 65, Standel amps!
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So you add a good contact pickup to the floor, and...Georg Sørtun wrote:
With enough energy charged in a heavy PSG body, transfer of vibrations through to the floor indicates the build-up of sub-harmonics. Build-up of strong sub-harmonics tend to cause what is known as "blooming" – kick-back from delayed sympathetic vibrations, a desirable effect that results in warmer tone and increased sustain.
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Where did you attach the contact PUs, Georg?
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I’ve heard that everything done to the Emmons push pull was done with tone in mind. The little wire hooks keep the guitar resonating around pickup and not being dampened into the cross bars by rods. The cut out for the tone control and neck switch was done that way for a reason to make tone better.
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D-10 Magnum, 8 &5, dark rose color
D-10 1974 Emmons cut tail, fat back,rosewood, 8&5
Nashville 112 amp, Fishman Loudbox Performer amp, Hilton pedal, Goodrich pedal,BJS bar, Kyser picks, Live steel Strings. No effects, doodads or stomp boxes.
D-10 Magnum, 8 &5, dark rose color
D-10 1974 Emmons cut tail, fat back,rosewood, 8&5
Nashville 112 amp, Fishman Loudbox Performer amp, Hilton pedal, Goodrich pedal,BJS bar, Kyser picks, Live steel Strings. No effects, doodads or stomp boxes.
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I think a large part has to do with the amount of aluminium in the changer fingers. They were pretty massive and solid compared to the thin scissors of the all-pull guitars.
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JCH SD-10 with BL XR-16 pickup, Sho-Bud Volume Pedal, Evidence Audio Lyric HG cables, Quilter Steelaire combo
JCH SD-10 with BL XR-16 pickup, Sho-Bud Volume Pedal, Evidence Audio Lyric HG cables, Quilter Steelaire combo
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I have always thought the changer made the biggest difference. I am sure Ron tried to keep all the other factors that affect the sound the same as much as possible when he made the La Grande. But my
La Grande was good tonewise but not as good as my push pulls. It would be interesting to hear from someone who had a push pull conversion. Also I believe pull release guitars have a better sound than all pull guitars generally due to the mass in the changer finger. All pull guitars seem to all have thin scissor fingers.
La Grande was good tonewise but not as good as my push pulls. It would be interesting to hear from someone who had a push pull conversion. Also I believe pull release guitars have a better sound than all pull guitars generally due to the mass in the changer finger. All pull guitars seem to all have thin scissor fingers.
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When the steel is in tune, and the band is in tune, the tone of the steel miraculously gets better. That's been my experience
When your steel just doesn't sound like it should, check your tuning first. Don't start turning knobs on the amp until you're sure the steel is in tune.
Apologies in advance for the topic drift.
When your steel just doesn't sound like it should, check your tuning first. Don't start turning knobs on the amp until you're sure the steel is in tune.
Apologies in advance for the topic drift.
It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing.
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i wonder if using wood like this with big knots running through the soundboard helps or hurts tone? soundboards are usually defect free quarter sawn boards. maybe it doesn't matter because the neck is the "soundboard."
Last edited by Gary Spaeth on 7 Jan 2019 5:23 am, edited 2 times in total.