Walnut as a tone wood?

KyleM

New member
So I'm in the process of building a guitar, wondering if a walnut body would be nice as a body. Any ideas are tips are appreciated.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

Walnut has a long history as a loved tonewood for acoustics and solidbody guitars. Built a solid walnut Les Paul copy back in '83. Heavy as hell, but it sounded great. The client stlll owns and plays it regularly.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

Walnut is really heavy. That's all I have to say. They can get up to 15 pounds for a Lester.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I just want to make a strat body, solid walnut. Maybe an oak top idk how that would look, I'll do some experimentation and come back to you guys
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I would use Walnut as the top with an Alder or Mahogany back. You won't have an overly heavy guitar and those woods compliment each other.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I’d go walnut any day, but you might want to chamber it for weight (slice in two chamber then glue back together.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

Walnut is really heavy. That's all I have to say. They can get up to 15 pounds for a Lester.

Fender has made solid walnut Teles and Strats - they always average the weight of a small anvil.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I’ve played one of the recent walnut body Rickenbacker 360’s recently. I liked the tone, but didn’t feel it sounded that different to my Maple Jetglo 360 (though, of course, that may be down to “that Ric thing”)


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Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I just want to make a strat body, solid walnut. Maybe an oak top idk how that would look, I'll do some experimentation and come back to you guys

Walnut strat body won't be stupid heavy, I used Oak once and will never use it again - best saved for bowling alley floors

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Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I would use Walnut as the top with an Alder or Mahogany back. You won't have an overly heavy guitar and those woods compliment each other.

I agree with this and have recently ordered parts to build a TeleGib this way. Besides regular Alder and Mahogany, roasted Alder and Ash are available, and I would use any of the four for a solid body or a back for a laminated top. My concern would be that a solid Walnut body would be too bright for my taste. I might do it if I was going to mount Filtertrons and go for more of a Ric vibe.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I’ve played one of the recent walnut body Rickenbacker 360’s recently. I liked the tone, but didn’t feel it sounded that different to my Maple Jetglo 360 (though, of course, that may be down to “that Ric thing”)


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I had a solid body Walnut S.G. kinda thing for a while... I'm pretty sure that the body was made out of about six 2in-2.5in pieces all glued together which is probably the biggest challenge of Walnut... You just can't get wood stock much bigger than that???

I remember that it sounded pretty great but as mentioned above it was heavy as $#it!!! Although I don't remember it having any neck dive issues, LOL!!! Personally I think it's got a lot of the same tonal qualities as Maple (kinda dense, bright, & tight) but Maple is much more readily available, A LOT cheaper, & easier to work into the desired finished product...

So unless you're after a Walnut wood grain for a natural finished guitar Maple is probably a better way to achieve that tone? Of course if that's the case a Walnut veneer would do the trick just fine...
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I would think a walnut top would be fine, but full walnut bodies I've tried were heavy and bright. You could even do a walnut top and back over a lighter wood. It certainly is beautiful. I have payed a 12 lb LP-style walnut guitar before that sounded bright as hell.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I'd love to see roasted Walnut! Walnut really needs some aging to dry out the wood and keep the strident tonality in check IMHO.I've played the early 80's Gibson Walnut SG's, and they sound most awesome, not really like a Mahogany SG. Paired with an Walnut/Ebony neck, they are really sweet.
I have an early 2000 Warmoth Walnut Superstrat, and paired with the right pickups to tame the bright nature of the wood, and in my case, na all rosewood neck to further mellow out the tone , it has really aged nicely and sounds great.
New Walnut with the wrong neck could really be terribly bright IMO.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

Big hulky LP-style? I wooodn't
Thinner-body like S-series with rounded edges, much routing, and a shreddy-thin neck? Yes walnut, even hard-maple body isn't that terribly heavy.

Carvin's full-rounded DC bodies are great for the heavies, plus you'll never have a neck-dive problem.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I'm sure I'll plane the blank down and sand it, I never was a fan of thick guitars anyways
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I have a 2011 Taylor W14ce LTD that was a one of the Spring LTD edition releases. I love the tone and projection I get from it, combined with the Sitka top. It's beautiful as well, with an AA flamed back and sides.

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Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

I have a Gibson The Paul from 1979 that is multi piece Walnut. I bought the guitar for sentimental reasons but soon remembered that it has a nice warm tone to it. Guitar is 8.5 lbs IIRC.
 
Re: Walnut as a tone wood?

Gene, I bet that is a cool guitar. I've always loved that series from the late 70s. Cool instruments. For awhile, companies made walnut basses, too, which seem to make a little more sense from a solid wood point of view.
 
Vintage Walnut.....

Vintage Walnut.....

Some quick shots I took of "Brown Dawg" Bought one when they first hit in the Spring of '79. Traded it in October of '79 for a Black '75 Strat. Never felt compelled to master it and regretted the trade every time I played it. Found this '79 about 25 years ago and grabbed it to rid myself of that trade regret. :9: :cool2:

Four piece body 3 piece neck. Dig that neck joint.

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