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Cartwright Thompson


Post  Posted 30 Jan 2009 3:58 pm    
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http://www.kelstone.be/

Kind of a Chapman Stick variant. It might be cool with a raised nut, played with a steel.
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Brad Bechtel


From:
San Francisco, CA
Post  Posted 30 Jan 2009 4:38 pm    
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It sort of implies that it can be played like a steel guitar on the site, from what I can tell. Definitely cool looking, sort of like a Chapman Stick laid on its side.

Update: If you go to their Myspace page, the first video shows someone playing one with a Stevens-type bar at one point in the demo.
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Last edited by Brad Bechtel on 31 Jan 2009 9:36 am; edited 1 time in total
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Ray Langley

 

From:
Northern California, USA
Post  Posted 30 Jan 2009 7:11 pm    
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....and, also like many other instruments made for touchstyle, it has a 34" scale.

I have a Mobius Megatar.
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Ray Langley

 

From:
Northern California, USA
Post  Posted 30 Jan 2009 9:36 pm    
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...and one of the problems with a 34" scale length is finding strings that are long enough.

On my 12 string Megatar the builder suggests that the smallest string can be no bigger than .009/.010.
This is for a high "D" note. If you want an "E" on the highest string, you would have to go even smaller. This would produce a thin tone.

Also, the wider the fret spacing, the more difficult it is to play slants.

Just some things to consider.
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James Kerr

 

From:
Scotland, UK
Post  Posted 31 Jan 2009 12:39 pm    
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What about the thing on the floor called a "Dynamic Muter Pedal"

James. (more interested in that)
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Ray Langley

 

From:
Northern California, USA
Post  Posted 31 Jan 2009 1:26 pm    
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Hi James,

Typically, touchstyle instruments are shipped with a foam or felt pad that covers most of the area at the first fret. Open strings are NEVER played.

I am not certain without seeing the muter pedal up close, but it looks like an arrangement similar to a bicycle brake cable. My guess is that it's used to raise or lower the muting pad.

Here is a close up of the muting pad on a regular touchstyle instrument:

http://www.megatar.com/english/models/TrueTapper/Storm/storm.html
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