Most stable neck material?

Re: Most stable neck material?

I've never had a problem with any of the necks on any of my guitars. Have I just been lucky?
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

and of course, any of the wood ones can be made even more stable with the addition of stabilizing graphite rods.

I agree with pretty much everything CTN posted...except for the above, and that is only because I have seen first hand that it is not always true.

I had a customer come in to the shop with a bass that was custom built for him. The bass had a fairly thick birdseye maple neck that had an extreme amount of upbow. Even the headstock was warped. You could also easily flex the neck back and forth by hand. It was clear to me that this piece of wood should never have been used for a guitar or bass neck. I know the builder (used to work with him) so I sent him and email and some pics. He was surprised by the movement of the neck because he had used 2 graphite rods to reinforce it.

I guess graphite can be a great stabilizer, but it won't make a bad piece of wood useable, and I'd personally never use it on a standard guitar or bass.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

I agree with pretty much everything CTN posted...except for the above, and that is only because I have seen first hand that it is not always true.

I had a customer come in to the shop with a bass that was custom built for him. The bass had a fairly thick birdseye maple neck that had an extreme amount of upbow. Even the headstock was warped. You could also easily flex the neck back and forth by hand. It was clear to me that this piece of wood should never have been used for a guitar or bass neck. I know the builder (used to work with him) so I sent him and email and some pics. He was surprised by the movement of the neck because he had used 2 graphite rods to reinforce it.

I guess graphite can be a great stabilizer, but it won't make a bad piece of wood useable, and I'd personally never use it on a standard guitar or bass.

very interesting, this is the first I've heard about something like this. Do you know if they were thick pieces of graphite or thin enough to flex a lot?
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

I've never had a problem with any of the necks on any of my guitars. Have I just been lucky?

I think its like many things on the internet... problems get much bigger and much more common...

I know for myself if i have to adjust a neck every other year or so I consider it stable and not a problem,Ive never had a neck that seemed unstable.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

very interesting, this is the first I've heard about something like this. Do you know if they were thick pieces of graphite or thin enough to flex a lot?

I do not know. It is quite possible that the graphite was not used properly. Still, it was obvious that the neck wood was much too weak to be used.

In my experience, figured wood can be highly variable in its overall strength/stiffness. At Stoney End Harps we started building some harps with flamed maple "corner sticks". These "sticks" are the framework for the soundbox of the harp and need to be fairly strong and stiff. I threw out many flamed maple sticks that either flexed way too much, or just plain broke in half when I would hand flex-test them. I'm sure this variability is one of the reasons you don't see more figured wood necks on guitars. You have to really pick through a stack to find a piece that will work well, whereas pretty much any old hunk of clear, hard maple will make a decent guitar neck.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

Carvin no longer uses graphite rods in their necks

Graphite rods help, but are not the be all end all. My EBMM Axis needs constant adjustment and that has graphite rods in it. My PRS, Gibson and Jackson- all using quartersawn necks rarely need adjustment. My 5 piece Ibanez neck never needed adjustment either
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

Laminated vertically, same as many neck thru designs are be very stable, particularly if you were to make it yourself and had control over grain direction.
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Re: Most stable neck material?

Carvin no longer uses graphite rods in their necks

Graphite rods help, but are not the be all end all. My EBMM Axis needs constant adjustment and that has graphite rods in it. My PRS, Gibson and Jackson- all using quartersawn necks rarely need adjustment. My 5 piece Ibanez neck never needed adjustment either


Ibanez also uses titanium rods.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

Ibanez just started using titanium rods, mainly on their guitars made in Indonesia - allowing them to ensure their cheaper Indonesian guitar necks will be stable
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

Ibanez just started using titanium rods, mainly on their guitars made in Indonesia - allowing them to ensure their cheaper Indonesian guitar necks will be stable


Nope. The Prestige guitars (at least in the 2013 lineup) had them.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

As far as my experience goes, double action truss rods make a great balance between stability / reliability vs complexity / price. They are relatively cheap compared to other methods and work the same way well.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

Graphite... Use it for a paddle in a canoe during the day, strum away at the campfires by night...
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

I have a Kramer The Duke which has an aluminum neck. You could fire it as a missle and then use it after it lands with no adjustment. It is also heavy as all get out.
 
Re: Most stable neck material?

I have a Kramer The Duke which has an aluminum neck. You could fire it as a missle and then use it after it lands with no adjustment. It is also heavy as all get out.

Hah! my very first bass was one of those but was the Hondo version that said "alien" on it. I actually dropped it once and the fingerboard came off the neck and used Elmer's glue to put it back on!
 
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