warmoth guitar question

philthis

New member
how much of a tone differance is it to have picups direct mounted to a guitar rather than under a pickgaurd in a routed out space. how will it affect the tone of the pick up? what will it add, more base or treble or sustain or volumn? And what about quarter sawn necks some jazz guy was telling me how great they are but he never said why. we all know about maple and rosewood tonal tendancies but what will a quartersawn neck do to those tone tendancies? warmoth offers them so there must be some demand. p.s. every one should check out tattood carrots warmoth built guitar its very nice. -thnx
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

Quartersawn maple refers more to the stability of the wood than the tone. I'm not sure of the exact technical explanation (something to do with the wood grain), but quartersawn maple is more stable than it's flatsawn counterpart.
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

fatty is right on
quarters sawn woods have thr grain running in a different direction than flat saw and they are less prone to warpage
thus, desireable
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

I think the reason it might be more expensive is because you get less usable wood out of a piece of maple if you quartersaw it as opposed to flatsawing it. Someone correct me if I'm wrong on this.
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

thnx for the info you guys, any body know about the direct mount pickups verses pick ups mounted under a pick gaurd?
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

fatty's on the ball again
quarter sawn wood is achieved by essentially cuttin pizza slices out of a log (very deep slices)
this is much less efficient then sliding it in layers
wish i could explain better, but fatty is right about costs

as for directly mounted pickups
pickups detect string vibration (which is altered by the wood combination of the guitar upon which the strings vibrate. that being said, the vibration of the pickups (what dirct mounting is supposed to accomplish) does not effect (IMHO) the string vibrations being detected by the picups

does that make sense
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

i have the neck pickups in all of my teles mounted directly into the wood and the bridge pickup is then mounted to the bridge. I think the tone is a little more full sounding but i really can't compare it any more. I do not have the same pickup in the neck position of anything else to compare it to. I did have a tele at one time with a pickguard mounted pickup but i changed it to a humbucker, so again i have no direct comparison. I don't think it could add any more sustain to the guitar but i do think it adds something since the pickup is also resonating with the wood of the body as it vibrates with the strings.

I haven't experienced any more feedback with a direct mounted pickup. I would say if you are going with humbuckers then you should just use the mounting rings. i think it looks better and is probably easier than direct mounting the pickups. If you are doing a tele then i would direct mount the neck pickup and if you are doing single coils like a strat then just mount them in a pickguard. You can't go wrong with the traditional ways, they are tested over and over again and produce some good tones.

I think it really comes down to the way you want it to look.
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

hey you guys, thanx so much for the info. its nice to know there is always some one out there that has experiance that can give solid advice.
 
Re: warmoth guitar question

Send you order to Warmoth in writing !

Let the buyer beware of jerks like GREG who work at warmoth!
 
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