The neck joint on a Telecaster is more rigid than on a Strat style body . . .
What's the difference?
As a general rule ash is brighter with more scooped mids and slightly more percussive lows, alder has more mids. Swamp ash will usually be lighter than alder, hard ash with be heavier. Hard ash will be brighter than swamp ash, similar to hard maple.
As I mentioned, everything I said is "general rules" wood is an organic material, there will always be exceptions.
As a general rule ash is brighter with more scooped mids and slightly more percussive lows, alder has more mids. Swamp ash will usually be lighter than alder, hard ash with be heavier. Hard ash will be brighter than swamp ash, similar to hard maple. FWIW, the original Frankie was hard ash.
As I mentioned, everything I said is "general rules" wood is an organic material, there will always be exceptions.
I'm not disagreeing with you, but I am curious as to why this would be. The two joints look pretty similar to me. Just wondering.
Ash...specifically Northern Ash. Very well described above by devastone...particularly awesome with a Maple Fretboard neck as evidence by the example of the Original EVH Frankie. Plus it looks awesome with a trans/clear finish. I've built a few Ash Bodied SuperTeles....
Dude, those teles seriously rock, especially #2, I may have to drive down to Littleton sometime.
As a general rule ash is brighter with more scooped mids and slightly more percussive lows, alder has more mids. Swamp ash will usually be lighter than alder, hard ash with be heavier. Hard ash will be brighter than swamp ash, similar to hard maple. FWIW, the original Frankie was hard ash.
As I mentioned, everything I said is "general rules" wood is an organic material, there will always be exceptions.
Northern ash is considerably heavier than swamp ash, probably 1 or even 2 lbs for a Strat body. It is a great sounding wood, but too heavy for me to use a whole lot.