Why I Don't Like Laminated Guitar Necks

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

In this video, I explain the reason I don't like laminated guitar necks. Hint: it's the seams. Help support this channel! Visit my store and buy a t-shirt or a guitar plan: / highlineguitars

Пікірлер: 374

  • @poulwinther
    @poulwinther2 ай бұрын

    A sandwich construction is one of the best known and most important principles in construction of any kind, 100% backed by physics and math. There's no discussion that laminated is incredibly superior in strength and stability. My building engineering dad taught me that 50 years ago already. Today I depend on it in the construction of super light single-end suspended X-ray tables which can hold 660 pds patients x 4 safety factor with minimum deflection. They simply cannot be designed from any material without the sandwich construction. Sorry buddy, but you are really wrong about this one.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 ай бұрын

    You absolutely missed the point. Laminations must be made correctly in order to work. If a laminated guitar neck is not made correctly, it won’t possess the advantages that are desired and in many cases, they will do the opposite of what is expected.

  • @poulwinther

    @poulwinther

    2 ай бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars You spent the entire video stating how single slab necks are just as stable as laminated dittos. That's not correct. Besides it's not difficult to make a good lamination but even a poor one is easily superior to a single slab of wood.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 ай бұрын

    @@poulwinther Prove it or I will delete your comment and hide you from my channel for violating my channel rules.

  • @JM-ll6hd

    @JM-ll6hd

    Ай бұрын

    Man, you seem more fragile than the laminated necks you're falsely labeling. You're literally trying to shut down any opinions that aren't your own for the sake of your ego.

  • @-Glenn_Quagmire

    @-Glenn_Quagmire

    Ай бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars Feisty.

  • @psa10hunter94
    @psa10hunter942 жыл бұрын

    I’ve seen many warped necks and they were all one piece. I can honestly say I’ve never seen a warped lam neck.

  • @sunn_bass
    @sunn_bass2 жыл бұрын

    Nice video. Actually its not hypothetical that properly laminiated wood is stronger,, stiffer and more stable, its simple physics in materials engineering. There have been studies on laminated woods (and other materials) versus single boards, not necessarily guitar related though but the principles are the same. The early aerospace industry used laminated woods for varous parts because a properly laminated board is stronger and more stable than a single board. A propeller made of a single board will fail, so laminated propellers were used with great success. As for as seams, I've actually never seen problems in better quality instruments having issues with seams but have seen this on lower priced instruments. Probably due to lower quality wood and poor seasoning prior to building. I have seen way more seam issues with fingerboards creeping on any instriment than multi laminated necks creeping and developing seams. Probably due to a bass fingerboard being about 2.5 inches wide, but the neck thickness being an inch or less. Most of my experience is with basses. I've played for 40 years and have built many of my own basses. The additional string tension and longer necks need a stiff and stable neck. Solid carbon fiber like my Steinberger is my favorite as far as stiffness, then I'd rank laminated 2nd, quartersawn 3rd and flatsawn 4th.

  • @torind2000

    @torind2000

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes! they make laminate beams for houses that are so much stronger.

  • @nocturnal101ravenous6

    @nocturnal101ravenous6

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is incorrect, A laminated Propellor is more prone to strike damage just like a CF Prop, whereas a solid beechwood prop typically can take a strike and be fine. Its simple physics the harder a material is the more brittle it is, there is no voodoo that can allow you to break simple rules of Chemistry and Physics sorry that just is not possible. Where you are getting your info from?, engineered wood is not as strong as a solid piece its just CHEAPER TO MANUFACTURE, which is why the industry switched to them on top of them being more stiff it leads to more efficiency at the cost of their damage resistance, Beechwood has a certain amount of flex under force which allows it to take impacts and reverberate the energy through its body, a laminate will just shatter. Also A composite is completely different, CF is not the same nor does it have the same properties as wood or other composites. So no it is not more stable and you have to always check them for crack damage in the seams due to temperature, Boeings 787 Dreamliner exterior skin is Composite CF and before and after every flight needs to be inspected for damage because it is so fragile. There are people today that still insist on running Wood props and insist on non composites and CF props because they can damage the engine when they crack from a strike. Also I had a few issues with Laminate Ibanez Wizard necks, like he mentioned expansion and contraction and humidity. Some twisted as well due to density differences in materials the temperature changes cause the neck to warp over time, remember not all necks are sealed with finishes.

  • @sunn_bass

    @sunn_bass

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nocturnal101ravenous6 I totally agree about the stiffer material being more brittle. Tungsten carbide is super stiff but brittle. And roasted maple is stiffer than plain maple but is more brittle and prone to cracks from the limited experience i have with roasted maple. For a guitar or bass neck with 3 to 5 laminates, the brittleness won't be an issue, but it will benefit from better stability. If a neck is laminated properly with properly aged wood, the neck should be more stable. And I've seen way more issues with fretboards developing noticeable seams than neck laminations. And I've seen way more twisted single piece necks than with laminates. To take laminates to the extreme, Philip Kubicki ex-factor basses where made with around 32 laminates of 2mm quartersawn maple. I've never seen one of those necks warp, have stability issues or seam issues. I pretty much only build basses. Stiffness is critical, much more so than guitars. I do think some of the lower priced instruments with laminated necks is bad. If the wood is not properly dried and matched; i can see those having issues. To make a good laminated neck takes a good deal of experience and time. It is more complicated for sure.

  • @nocturnal101ravenous6

    @nocturnal101ravenous6

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sunn_bass It will be when it falls over, and you don't understand its more prone to a crack remember the amount of tension you have it under....but see You called it there, its about understanding the risk and reward of using the materials in that way. "I do think some of the lower priced instruments with laminated necks is bad. If the wood is not properly dried and matched; i can see those having issues." yes and that is the problem its cheaper to build a laminate neck, and manufacturers are trying to hit a price point, so the chances an off the shelf Guitar or Bass under $2500 is done properly is really a roll of the dice and up to the brand in assuring through QC measures and warranty. I personally have seen too many go bad, as someone mentioned a 1 piece maple neck from Fender with the Walnut skunkstripe almost always has shrinkage or bulges.

  • @sunn_bass

    @sunn_bass

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nocturnal101ravenous6 Great conversation! There are so many ways to look at construction methods. Many pros and cons. Most of my experience is with bass necks. By default, the extra string tension and extra neck length pose issues that guitars don't have. So much boils down to the wood preparation, wood quality and the builder. I would never buy a cheap laminated neck because there are more factors to consider The 3 necks I've seen issues with are Gibson, Fender and old Peavey bi-laminated necks. For many Fender's the skunk strip is very noticeable. I've always wondered if that was an issue with how the walnut skunk stripe was dried, and not the design itself. This is one design I've never built, but I've owned a bunch of. The old Peavey bi-laminated necks occasionally split on the glue seam. Most that I saw with issues was when I lived in Texas and heat softened the glue. Then again I've seen tons of heat issues back then with a lot of guitars being overheated cause people left instruments in their trunk (dumb). I have a 1986 Peavey patriot, their cheapest model from then, with no issues and no seam that is noticeable. As for Gibsons, that 17 degree headstock angle is just begging to snap. Speaking of angled headstocks, scarf joints are generally considered better than a single piece neck for angled headstocks. I have seen many scarf joints, rarely noticed the seam of the joint. I love hearing different perspectives as everyone's experience is different. Even the climate where we live make a difference. I now live in Ohio and deal with making more adjustments to instruments than when i lived in the Gulf coast of Texas. Cheers

  • @agdtec
    @agdtec2 жыл бұрын

    I have 2 ibanez guitars with laminated necks and I have a Les Paul and a SG I gig most Friday and Saturday nights and some Sunday afternoons in bars and I live in North of Chicago I have not had any noticeable rasing of the grain in the Ibanez necks. I have noticed all the necks have problems going from the car to the stage in the summer or winter. But it is never unplayable but I can notice the difference and I make the necessary trust rod adjustment.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ibanez knows how to make laminated necks that's for sure.

  • @cschmerlin
    @cschmerlin2 жыл бұрын

    I do like the way laminated necks look with the contrasting woods. I had never considered that the changes over time could cause the seams to be felt. Good info!

  • @agent_of_cthulhu
    @agent_of_cthulhu2 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Keep up the great work!

  • @Shiznitt_
    @Shiznitt_ Жыл бұрын

    Always nice to have a luthier’s perspective on controversial subjects in the guitar industry. It would interesting to see your perspective on neck through vs bolt on and set neck constructions

  • @afurnituremakerslife
    @afurnituremakerslife2 жыл бұрын

    I haven't felt any glue seams in laminated necks, and that's here in Minnesota where we swing from dessert to jungle humidity twice a year.

  • @justinwaddle5286

    @justinwaddle5286

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you. IF you feel a seam, it's literally 100ths of a millimeter or less. If that tiny increment affects your ability to play, maybe you should put the guitar down and work for NASA.

  • @scottakam
    @scottakam2 жыл бұрын

    I like the look of multi-laminate necks more than anything. They might be more stable if done well. They are certainly not cheaper to manufacture even if the wood is cheaper. There are lots of cases where different species of wood are glued together without issue. Maple tops on mahogany, ES335 plywood guitars, inlays on fretboards, every acoustic guitar. I wouldn't think it would be a big issue if the wood is dried properly.

  • @DE-GEN-ART

    @DE-GEN-ART

    7 ай бұрын

    laminate necks are cheaper for my use case because i can reliably design and build them from most scraps that cost nothing. those carbon fiber rods he had are what really separates the men from the boys of strength and tuning stability. im scouring junk yards for wrecked cars with carbon fiber panels and trim to mill down for necks, those rods are expensive and sometimes fard to find

  • @Guitarorpheo
    @Guitarorpheo Жыл бұрын

    I have made over 250 necks, approximately half is 1 piece, the other half is multi piece. I even used the same blanks to make 1piece as well as multi piece necks. Multi piece is, by far, the most stable. I need to adjust the trussrod with the single piece necks, all the time, even with carbon rods, where the multi piece necks require at least 5x less adjustment. I also did some other tests with glue and how much they add to the overall weight of a neck, as a percentage of the neck. It's less than 0.5%. I think, I can handle a bit of glue in exchange for added stability.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    Жыл бұрын

    If everyone made their laminated necks correctly, like you obviously do, I wouldn't have felt the need to make this video.

  • @GuitarQuackery
    @GuitarQuackery8 ай бұрын

    You did provide food for thought. I never really gave it much thought that no actual scientific tests have been made, to prove or disprove those commonly accepted theories.

  • @timfoster5043
    @timfoster5043 Жыл бұрын

    Good thoughts.

  • @bachmusicczech
    @bachmusicczech11 ай бұрын

    Well, I have to say that I have thousands necks made from one piece in my hands but majority of them had a problem, twist, warp, banana arching. . . . after a time. Laminated necks, I could see it don´t have it. This is my experience. A note- the negative things were happened on great cut wood too.

  • @mulekickhandmadeguitars8465
    @mulekickhandmadeguitars84652 жыл бұрын

    As a Cigar Box Guitar builder, a stable and strong neck is of utmost importance to me, as CBG's normally have no truss rod. Therefore, I use quarter sawn oak, which stays very stable. But, more & more CBG builders are now laminating 4 mirrored contrasting woods together for their necks. All woodworkers know that a glued joint is always far stronger than the wood itself. Good video!

  • @dalgguitars
    @dalgguitars2 жыл бұрын

    12:05 "I rarely shy away from controversy when it comes to my opinions on guitar building." No truer words have been spoken on the interwebs. ;-)

  • @berdeter
    @berdeter2 жыл бұрын

    You have a good point at least with the last argument. It also help rejects an Idea I had from your previous video that was to try and do a laminated neck including carbonfiber instead of wood for some laminations

  • @---Wade---
    @---Wade---2 жыл бұрын

    I build my own guitars. This problem with being able to feel the glue seams also occurs on a Fender style one piece neck with a skunk stripe. I typically use quarter sawn roasted maple with a walnut skunk stripe. In my experience, while not separating in any way, the seam after a time, can be felt in some builds requiring be to sand the area around the seam and refinish.

  • @Mikey__R
    @Mikey__R7 ай бұрын

    If I get one board from a tree, I'm only responsible for the use that I put that board to. If everyone else who got boards from that tree puts them all in the smoker, that's not on me. If anything, that's even more motivation to make the best use of my board. But in reality, trees are renewable, and wastage is expected. I make stripey necks because I like how they look, and if I can rip one flatsawn board into two quartersawn boards, with something pretty in the middle, then I'm happy. Not that quartersawn is necessarily more stable, it's something else I like the look of. My 14 year old bass with a 5 piece neck of maple and purple heart, is still straight and twist free as it ever was, and it's not had an easy life. It's all subjective and reasonable people can disagree. Thanks for sharing your thoughts!

  • @WoodworkerDan
    @WoodworkerDan7 ай бұрын

    I own several maple/walnut/maple necks that are decades old and I cannot feel the seam. I have owned and played banjo necks that are a century old that are laminated from different species and you simply cannot feel the seam. I did play one banjo where I could feel the seam, but that builder used a veneer between the layers, and I could feel the veneer. And, of course, builders routinely glue an ebony or rosewood fingerboard on top of a mahogany or maple or other species neck, so gluing one species to another is pretty common.

  • @Harding1360
    @Harding1360 Жыл бұрын

    Could you scarf joint one long 3/4 inch board and cut a second 3/4 inch board in two and stack those for the body width and glue it that way? It’s that strong?

  • @FPChris
    @FPChris2 жыл бұрын

    Love ‘em

  • @ferguspage9112
    @ferguspage91122 жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @stevenedwards4470
    @stevenedwards44702 жыл бұрын

    I'm not trying to pick a fight here. I can go either way for my purposes. However, if it is to be believed, that a Titebond glue joint is stronger than the original wood, how can a laminated neck fail to be more stable? Especially with that join multiplied over every square inch of it's application? I do believe it as i have ripped apart Titebond glue joints many times and it always rips up the fiber under the join. The point you made about different species expanding and contracting at different rates is well noted tho. I have to believe the conditions would have to be severe for that and might reflect faulty applications of adhesive. I mean that stuff is so rough to seperate once cured 😝 Imagining any shift over all those sides is mind boggling.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    I never mentioned the glue. I know from many decades of experience how strong modern wood glue is. My issue was how the wood shrinks at different rates and can cause the seams to stick out. In fact, the glue will make it worse since the wood around it will shrink.

  • @johnnycab8986

    @johnnycab8986

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars Theres also the issue of creep that is inherent in PVA glues, I wonder if using epoxy based glues for laminated necks would cut down on the issue of the seam becoming more prominent.

  • @sparrowhawk81
    @sparrowhawk812 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video. It is indeed food for thought. I've been working on my first from-scratch guitar (admittedly very sporadically) for close to a year now. I know that's a long time but...I have day jobs and ADD and...other mental issues that make the prospect of making things from scratch seem pretty terrifying at times. The neck blank I've been working on is indeed laminated. I'm going to go ahead and finish it and see how it goes, but honestly up until this video my thought was "Why wouldn't you laminate, other than you just don't want to?". Not so much to suggest that I thought either technique was good or bad, I just never would have thought about possible pitfalls. I don't know if I will ever get to the point of making these things for any kind of living, but the thought of dealing with the expectations of customers when I feel like I know better (down the road of course, I'm still learning) is something that doesn't sound very fun to me.

  • @bronsonguidry1744
    @bronsonguidry17442 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for all your insight and wonderful content, great video as usual. I would like to pose this question for pondering... or correct me if I'm wrong. Does humidity actually affect "finished" wood? I know that the answer seems very easy to just say yes, but I'm wondering if a fully finished piece of wood, guitar neck or otherwise, would be susceptible to moisture expansion or what not. I do expect sudden shifts in temperature to affect it, but I see humidity as moisture penetrating wood fibers and causing expansion... which seems like something that might not happen with a fully sealed finish, such as a glossed laquer, poly, epoxy, etc.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Changes in temperature alone doesn’t affect wood. When the temperature changes and the wood moves, it’s because of the associated change in humidity. In theory, sealing the wood should prevent it from absorbing moisture, but it doesn’t. Wood is made up of tiny cells which can fill with moisture like a sponge. To fully seal the wood, every cell needs to be filled. In most cases, that’s not possible. You may think your sealer is blocking moisture, but on a microscopic level, tiny voids in the sealer allow moisture to pass through to the wood. Applying sealer or finish only reduces the amount of absorption, but it can’t eliminate it.

  • @AnimalJohn85
    @AnimalJohn852 жыл бұрын

    Love the asthetic of a laminate neck, can get really crazy with different woods. But more than anything as long as the neck feels right laminate or single piece is all gravy with me. You got some skills there sir, always a good watch.

  • @JabrinkTheStink
    @JabrinkTheStink Жыл бұрын

    “Thats just like, your opinion man!”

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    Жыл бұрын

    Perhaps. But there are no studies that prove a laminated neck is better. And if you read through the comments, you'll see that many others have had problems with them that they thought shouldn't happen just because the neck was laminated. But they did happen because there is no required standard for making laminated necks. As a result, there are good ones and there are bad ones.

  • @AndrewSmith-pc8eq
    @AndrewSmith-pc8eq2 жыл бұрын

    I like the purple heart in the neck.

  • @tylersoares1796
    @tylersoares1796 Жыл бұрын

    There is a book.. called Understanding Wood, by R. Bruce Hoadley. Guitar makers are often lacking some basic wood technology knowledge. Of course these experiments have been done.. wood manufacturing goes way beyond making guitar necks. Lamination generally speaking are more stable.. but of course grade selection is important and grain orientation. You can see tables of different species and determine how much they expand and contract compared to others.. choosing woods with similar rates of expansion/contraction would be wise when laminating different species.

  • @arcarioandsons
    @arcarioandsons2 жыл бұрын

    I might not always agree with everything you say, mostly because I enjoy a different perspective, I can always appreciate what you've got to say and enjoy your perspective! This has definitely given me some things to think about! I harvest my own trees, log, mill, and do everything to them so I have every option available to me, and I still like the idea of lamination but much more in the traditional style you described vs the new ones that are clearly just about looks, I can't imagine more layers doesn't increase the risk of that seem development, I would think you would need woods that are pretty much the same hardness.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    You nailed it, my friend. I plan to do a follow-up video where I will explain the importance of moisture content, wood acclimation, and matching different species of wood based on measured shrinkage.

  • @arcarioandsons

    @arcarioandsons

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars you're speaking my language! I plan on putting out videos about the trees I'm harvesting off the forest floor, how I logged them, how long I waited to slab them, how I slabbed them, how I dried them outside, and oh yeah... Species of wood etc etc lol

  • @arcarioandsons

    @arcarioandsons

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars I'll give you a hint at what might be to come... A super strong and available wood plentiful in northeast America... I've only known one person to use it for guitar necks... But he's one of the greatest guitar players of all time and an astrophysicist, so I doubt he used that wood species by mistake... Maybe not the "king" of neck woods but perhaps the...

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@arcarioandsons Are you referring to Brian May? The neck on his Red Special was Mahogany, which is common for guitar necks.

  • @arcarioandsons

    @arcarioandsons

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars I know he used oak in the body but I could have sworn I heard him say they used an oak mantle piece for the neck as well but google seems to say mahogany. I'll have to search for whatever interview I saw.

  • @MrGerhow
    @MrGerhow2 жыл бұрын

    I would have pleased to hear you comment on the stability of roasted neck and how it is done. Thanks for your Video.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Properly roasted Maple makes for a very stable guitar neck.

  • @seanforsythe78
    @seanforsythe782 жыл бұрын

    my first build is a 7 string fretless bass for myself and i couldn't imagine trying to find a solid piece of maple suitable.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    A solid piece of Maple with carbon fiber reinforcement would work very well.

  • @charliemikeguitars5909
    @charliemikeguitars59092 жыл бұрын

    I build both regularly myself. When I do do a laminate neck, I mirror the grains. Makes sense to do it this way. Not sure if it is making a difference, just better to be safe than sorry. I do like to do three piece ones, the middle piece I will sometimes use a different board of the same species. this will many time result in a slight shade of color difference, which is what I am going for. Nice video by the way.

  • @victormarinelli5660
    @victormarinelli56602 жыл бұрын

    My guitar tech/luthier repaired the sprouting truss rod inlay/cover on the back of my Fender bass. He said he's come across the problem many times. I don't recall seeing a laminate neck on any of his builds.

  • @AugmentGuitars
    @AugmentGuitars2 жыл бұрын

    Great video and points! I also mostly use one piece necks. I just really like the look of a single consistent piece. I really only do laminated necks with multiple different woods as aesthetically, I think it looks a lot better than a multi-lam neck with the same wood (which I really don't like the look of....) As for the glue seams, I agree. I've even seen on some guitars that had the neck painted/cleared show the glue seams. Using a one piece neck also saves time as you don't have to cut and glue all of the boards together.

  • @stephenholloway2889
    @stephenholloway28897 ай бұрын

    I received as a 'spares repairs' 1967 Eko 12 string recently. Usual 5 piece laminated neck which was almost perfect after all this time. I installed a 'Bridge Doctor' due to sinkage and re-glued the detached back. The neck just needed a quick tweak of the truss rod and fret work but I think in this instance Eko had the right idea. I can though see where it may have an adverse effect in uneducated hands. Thanks for the vids. Steve

  • @davidclink2032
    @davidclink20322 жыл бұрын

    Excellent. 1st guitar i made was a T style for a friend. He wanted 3d flag painted. So didn't was exotic wood. Ref. Was a British luthier who surprisingly recommended Popular. Stable and light. Found 10x10x2' cutoff piece in a firewood pile. Took 6 weeks of outside /inside to see if it warped etc. Didn't so we made the Bodyand used Fender neck. Still as stable as 10 years ago. Weyerhaeuser rip gave us method to kiln dry at home . Since have used other woods and mixed them on bodies. Best thing they offer are anesthetics and better prices for the few we actually sold. Of course Stewmac etal tell us to keep guitars in case to protect from growth.

  • @thijs199
    @thijs1992 жыл бұрын

    I believe you are right. Carbon fiber probably is the best way to reïnforce a neck. It would be a solution to laminate the neck, with a one-piece underneath. So that you'd get the contrasting wood above but just one where you put your thumb. So you'd laminate like half the thickness of a neck and then glue on a piece underneath.

  • @jackpalczynski7884
    @jackpalczynski7884 Жыл бұрын

    What about necks with different wood fingerboards? My 1969 Guild Studio 302 that I've owned since new hasn't done any noticeable moving around. Maybe I just can't see it because the neck is bound. I guess I should look at a 50's Tele or Strat that don't use binding.

  • @MonsterGuitars
    @MonsterGuitars2 жыл бұрын

    I make laminated necks for only two real reasons. Whether it's good for the environment or not, it makes better use of my "scraps" so I don't have as much waste wood. Plus, they just look so good with different coloured pieces!

  • @landofahhs_1
    @landofahhs_1 Жыл бұрын

    It is very refreshing to hear you say most people think their conclusions are factual, when they actually aren't. Nowadays there are few people who have the intelligence to realize they are not as smart as they think... Otherwise everyone would be successful AND IN HIGH DEMAND. :) In the real world true artists and craftsmen are the minority and NOT out to show the world how smart they are, but more to do what they enjoy doing for their own satisfaction and NOT notoriety or self promotion.

  • @danieledandrea4320
    @danieledandrea43202 жыл бұрын

    I just subscribed. Well done nice channel

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome, thank you!

  • @dappawap
    @dappawap2 жыл бұрын

    Pinblocks on pianos are also laminated these days. In some cheaper models the layers separate making the piano unplayable. Unfortunately my laminated headstock broke 3 times , contrary to the belief they are stronger, but it still stays in tune very well despite regluing. That is an 80s Aria ProThorsound by Matsumoka.

  • @dappawap

    @dappawap

    Жыл бұрын

    @@willrichtor my guitar stoll plays well despite its adventures of doom, in fact, the most reliable and in tune guitar I have ever owned

  • @chocolatecookie8571
    @chocolatecookie85712 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, sir. I also watched the following video about laminated necks. Does the same perspective you have also apply to necks for 7-string guitars? I would like to know that for the right decision making 🙏

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, absolutely!

  • @chocolatecookie8571

    @chocolatecookie8571

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars thank you for answering, it saves me a lot of money not to spend it on an expensive laminated neck 😊 By the way, I like your new intro with the face close to the camera 😄👌🏻

  • @nafis6668
    @nafis66682 жыл бұрын

    I noticed the seems on laminated neck too. It was on ibanez SR700 neck. When I'm selling that bass, the buyer make that flaw as bargaining point. Thank God i still able to sell it on the price that i wanted.

  • @scottclark7592
    @scottclark75922 жыл бұрын

    its not a question of if laminated wood is more strong or stable- because it is-proven time and again by scientific study. The question is whether there is a need for this strength in a guitar neck.

  • @b476816
    @b4768162 жыл бұрын

    What’s your opinion on roasted maple necks? I’ve been told they are more resistant to changes in humidity.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love them. I would use them more often if they were readily available at reasonable prices.

  • @rocher3087

    @rocher3087

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great stability, but torrified wood is a tad more brittle

  • @micahwatz1148
    @micahwatz11482 жыл бұрын

    My Kiesel has a 5 piece. Maple, mahogany, maple, mahogany, maple. Thing stiff as a brick with the carbon fiber rods too. But theres no seams because it has paint and clearcoat over them.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Give it time. But if you want a guarantee the seams won't sprout, never move the guitar from it's present location.

  • @DaveWestGuitar
    @DaveWestGuitar2 жыл бұрын

    Laminate 30 narrow rectangular strips of paper. Try bending it both with a flat-sawn and quarter-sawn orientation.

  • @alexanderguestguitars1173
    @alexanderguestguitars11732 жыл бұрын

    Spot on. From my own experience, I would second everything you said. I recently did a 5 piece laminated neck (customer's spec) wenge/purpeheart/wenge/purpleheart/wenge. It was sanded to a beautiful smooth finish and oiled with Crimson Guitars finishing oil (5 coats). Then I shipped it to the customer. about 3 months later, the guitar was returned to me as the purpleheart stringers had shrunk slightly more than the wenge, leaving a stepped finish on the neck. I re-sanded it and sent it back to the customer. I also did another guitar with a similar neck - same thing happened. This one was high gloss lacquered. With both I was using very well seasoned timber. It's a well known phenomenon that different timbers expand and contract at different rates. Therefore laminated necks will always have the inherent possibility of "seam sprout".

  • @kiyanharchegani2588

    @kiyanharchegani2588

    2 жыл бұрын

    spot on? sounds like you used woods that have significantly different properties

  • @alexanderguestguitars1173

    @alexanderguestguitars1173

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kiyanharchegani2588 Yes, as I said in the comment, different timbers expand and contract at different rates. As I also said, the choice of timbers was the customer's not mine.

  • @swancrunch

    @swancrunch

    4 ай бұрын

    Customer does not need to have knowledge of difference in timber and it's your job to inform them of potential danger of making lam neck especially without sealed hard poly finish.

  • @alexanderguestguitars1173

    @alexanderguestguitars1173

    3 ай бұрын

    @@swancrunch Yes, I did inform them at the design stage. They were well aware that it could happen, but chose to go with it. So it was no surprise to them when it did. I fixed it at no cost to the customer as part of standard after-sales care. It can also happen with a hard polyurethane finish. You'll never be able to stop two timbers with different expansion and contraction rates from forming a step at a glue joint whatever finish you put on it.

  • @pablotoo
    @pablotoo2 жыл бұрын

    Great topic, intelligently put across. Particularly loved your comment re online opinions, often given or taken as being fact, soo true. I personally love the look of laminated necks but I think your concerns are very valid. You should know, it’s what you do for a living. Time will tell. I’m sure this has gotten some owner’s (self included) running their thumbs down the back of their laminated necks 😂

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well said!

  • @lorengreenfield9554
    @lorengreenfield95542 жыл бұрын

    I've created a neck from rimu (red pine), using a tusq nut, 10° angle, gotoh locking tuners, and I wasn't happy with the tuning stability. This was quarter sawn too. I created another one from the same wood, this time using a 3-piece laminate neck, rotating the pieces to have one fairly straight grain and the outer ones book ended, same tusq nut, same locking tuners, same break angle. The result was much better tuning stability. That was scientific enough for me and at least for rimu, laminate is the way to go for me. I suspect a harder wood could have different results.

  • @cheapskate8656

    @cheapskate8656

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think if we are using softwoods then lamination is probably essential. I think for hardwoods its probably overkill. I made my 1st test guitar out of pine radiata. I cut the piece of flatsawn timber down the middle rotated it and glued it back together for a 2 piece simulated quarter sawn. To my surprise it played well.

  • @eyeofamon
    @eyeofamon2 жыл бұрын

    How did you get through this without video uttering the phrase "Hippie Sandwich."

  • @michaelwallace1189
    @michaelwallace11892 жыл бұрын

    I think there is at least some evidence, if only empirical, that a properly constructed laminate neck is more stable. The sheer number of Fenders with twisted one piece necks seems to support the theory. I have built a couple laminate necks that are perfect, zero issues. I have only built one single piece neck and even though the wood was properly dry, it twisted as the material was removed. Unseen knot inside the plank that didn't show until the neck was carved. I don't think it would have happened if there hadn't been something going on inside the board, but it does happen. These are just my experiences though. Of course the laminate is a lot more work, especially since I don't own a planer or a jointer, just a low angle jack plane, but the work, the pursuit of perfection is part of the fun right?

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Properly constructed is the key so many miss.

  • @MikMech
    @MikMech2 жыл бұрын

    Lamination to me, is just decoration. Stability is a bonus. Vintage wouldn't be a thing if one piece necks were a problem.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Stability as a bonus only happens when done correctly.

  • @robertshorthill6836
    @robertshorthill68362 жыл бұрын

    I make my mandolin necks using quarter sawn strips of the hardest dark wood I can find between strips of less dark hard wood like paduk with hard or curly white maple to the out sides. I will put a pair of carbon fiber (.250 X .200" ) "rod" inserts let into the neck blank which elimiminates the need for a truss rod. It probably is over kill, but these necks can withstand the heaviest string gauges that the top carved sound boards can tolerate. These suckers can be loud with the right amount of thickness. The thickness can be a hit or miss depending on the wood for the top. Each mando will be different, but after a while, each will be in the right ball park. Sort of like children from a large family. --each with uniques features. Ask Jerry Rosa for his ideas on the need for truss rods for mandolins. Bob.

  • @FrugalFixerSpike
    @FrugalFixerSpike2 жыл бұрын

    I have a guitar I built with Ambrosia Maple and Black walnut, after a year, I can feel the difference in the wood. You can feel the seems, they were smooth and flat when built, but now, they are just as you explained. I guess the One Piece Bass will not have that issue for sure!

  • @julianbeyer733

    @julianbeyer733

    3 күн бұрын

    Maybe that has been caused by the woods humidity, wich was too high when glued

  • @JamesSClapperton
    @JamesSClapperton4 ай бұрын

    I feel you on pretty much everything but the sustainability but. To me that’s like saying you can’t say you’re using water responsibly because it all came from the same well and some people are using it differently. You have the amount you have. If you choose to use it in a way that makes use instead of waste, even down to 1/8” fancy strips in a neck that would have gone to the burn pile, you are most certainly working in a sustainable fashion. Good video.

  • @jdoc99
    @jdoc992 жыл бұрын

    It seems like you made a video about how laminated necks are just as great as using a solid piece of wood as long as you stick with the same type of wood.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    You're on the right path.

  • @TaftysGuitars
    @TaftysGuitars2 жыл бұрын

    My reasons aren't very scientific or controversial, but I do it because it looks cool.

  • @Jasonbova
    @Jasonbova2 жыл бұрын

    Just made my first laminated neck through guitar. I actually used mahogany purple heart and 2 thin soft flamed maple strips bc thats all i had and it looks beautifus Mainly i did it because i thought it would look cool. i think the correct moisture content probably has the most to do with stability. But im still a novice as i have only built4 full guitars. which all play amazing im happy to say!

  • @stevepelham9010
    @stevepelham90106 ай бұрын

    Yeah I have a guitar the second one with a three piece laminated slim D neck and it is just as much an disapointment as that earlier one was. The neck is reacting wildly to the invoirement. In this winter temparature and humidity is shifting a lot by the day and that neck is lingering about like an snake. I got three guitars that acts as it should bee, some grumpyness might occure at first but as played it will go. The common thing with these three are well made simple necks. One C shaped bat made of hard maple, one quarter sawn medium thick C shaped and again hard maple and a simular sized and shaped one made of Mahogany. Meaty, dry and stiff ones, no fret sprout nothing.

  • @m.f.3347
    @m.f.3347 Жыл бұрын

    I think the efficiency argument is pretty convincing. If I'm paying for a board, I want to use as much of it as I can. I also think they can look much nicer, especially when you contrast light and dark woods, but that's just my opinion. Fair enough if you prefer one-piece necks - to each their own.

  • @aideeaidee1
    @aideeaidee115 күн бұрын

    If I know that a neck will not warp because I have the 'right' wood... How do I know? Using laminated necks is stronger and more stable, but I also find them aesthetically nice, especially with contrasting woods. However, it is a fact that constructing them takes more time, and avoiding seams is a matter of craftsmanship. But I'm just a hobbyist and don't need to make a production to make a living. But I see that when you depend on it, time is money, so using non-laminated necks saves (a lot of) time.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    14 күн бұрын

    Laminated necks are NOT necessarily stronger and more stable. There is a right way and a wrong way to laminate wood and if it isn't done properly, the results can be the opposite of strong and stable.

  • @DanGoodShotHD
    @DanGoodShotHD2 жыл бұрын

    I have a cheap ibanez bass with a lam neck. Yes. I can feel the seems. I still like it though.

  • @thedirtyknobs
    @thedirtyknobs2 жыл бұрын

    firebirds seems ?

  • @mattbaker8791
    @mattbaker87912 жыл бұрын

    I came to the same conclusion some years back, I used to laminate necks because I thought they looked cool but I made one with European maple purpleheart and wenge with veneers for pinstripes. They shrank at different rates and caused a seem you could feel, of course it can be sanded and refinished, especially since I oil and wax my necks but it’s a hard thing to tell your client that their expensive new guitar needs to be repaired months after delivery. Ever since I’ve switched to single boards with a scarf joint in the headstock. The only way I would laminate a neck these days is if the wood was the same species, preferably from the same board and air dried for many years, not fresh out of the kiln. I would also avoid using water based polyvinyl glue like tightbond and opt for polyurethane or epoxy instead.

  • @mannyleigh2571
    @mannyleigh2571 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your ideas, all very god! Bottom line is build from one piece of wood that is straight, true and kiln dried. The grain must be straight wilt no knots or imperfections and all will work out just fine for years of exceptional playing. It really is that simple.

  • @flyonwall360
    @flyonwall3602 жыл бұрын

    Physics. Lamination does increase strength. However, with wood it has to be done properly. I've got a couple of Mexican Martins and they are a perfect example of Lamination. My cheapest of Martins is a work horse and in the winter it will go from inside temps to -10 and then back to inside temps with no problems, without a case. In the early days of Hamer guitars they had warpage problems with their one piece necks and solved the problem with two piece necks. If you have a single piece of good wood and it's cut properly then okay. Some players didn't care for the Stratobond neck of the Mexican Martins but I find the neck is fine. The Mexican Martins use a less expensive fretwire. After 10 months of playing I needed a fret job.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    What are the physics?

  • @flyonwall360

    @flyonwall360

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars Wow, how long have you been building guitars?

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@flyonwall360 20 years. Now, about those physics… 😉

  • @flyonwall360

    @flyonwall360

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars Do your own homework.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@flyonwall360 I have. However, the pesky thing about physics is that it can both prove and disprove theories related to laminated necks. When you say "Lamination does increase strength," you are assuming that the proper materials and lamination techniques are always used. When it comes to guitar necks, that's not always the case. Physics can prove the case for laminated necks in a tightly controlled situation, but if the situation is less than ideal, all bets are off.

  • @jamesmarkham7489
    @jamesmarkham74892 жыл бұрын

    I’ve never noticed a stability, strength, or tone difference. I think it comes down to quality wood and construction. Done well either way seems to work well in my experience. I have a 20 year old Spector with the 3 piece maple neck and I feel no seem lines and a 20 year old fender and both are stable and resonant.

  • @rahulmenon4357

    @rahulmenon4357

    2 жыл бұрын

    I like how people pretend that treatment and maintenance have 0 impact on what happens to a guitar neck.

  • @AndrewScott1762
    @AndrewScott17622 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been a carpenter for many many years and it just makes sense to me (in theory) that if you do laminates of hardwoods with opposing grain orientations, it would of course add stability due to the cancelling affect the opposing forces holding the adjoined piece in check, essentially. But you are correct that it’s not been proven through studies. Diggin the long hair dude ✌🏻

  • @gregholmberg2
    @gregholmberg22 жыл бұрын

    Australian luthiers Trevor Gore and Gerard Gilet agree with you. In their book "Contemporary Acoustic Guitar" they say, "We do not laminate our necks as we find it offers no performance benefit over properly executed solid wood necks." They use straight grain pieces with little run-out, quarter-sawn (grain perpendicular to the fretboard). Figured woods can be less stable. Between the two of them, they have built over 2000 acoustic guitars. Gore has a Phd in engineering from Oxford.

  • @ErebosGR

    @ErebosGR

    2 жыл бұрын

    Acoustic necks are thick enough that they don't need the lamination. For Ibanez, lamination grew out of necessity for building thinner and thinner necks.

  • @cheapskate8656

    @cheapskate8656

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fair enough, lamination should be stronger but for that application it would be overkill.

  • @mattfisher401
    @mattfisher4012 жыл бұрын

    I have a 1968 Ibanez with a 3 pc neck. I believe it's maple and mahogany. The middle is raised slightly on the headstock, but not on the neck. I don't believe a raised Ridge on the neck would bother me but nicks that run perpendicular certainly do.

  • @petermuller161
    @petermuller1612 жыл бұрын

    That's interesting coming from a builder with intimate knowledge. My favorite instruments have 3 piece necks. I'm a very unparticular player and I can never know what a guitar is like without playing it. Sometimes a messed up dented and dropped guitar sounds better than a high end boutique piece. I cant really explain how it works.

  • @71supa
    @71supa2 жыл бұрын

    The most stable, best playing, best sounding neck I ever built is a five-piece laminate (maple, walnut, maple, walnut, maple) construction with carbon fiber rods and rosewood fingerboard glued on with G-flex epoxy. The neck is 10 years old now and lives by the ocean where we regularly get 20% - 75% humidity fluctuations. At about year 8 I started to feel extremely subtle lines in the hand rubbed finish between the laminations, I can live with that. How much of its greatness is due to the laminate construction, who knows? It was really a matter of convenience on my part, as you mentioned. An old maple table fell off a truck in front of my house one day and all the boards delaminated on impact, so I've been making prototype necks with that free material for years now.

  • @stimpsonjcat26

    @stimpsonjcat26

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm guessing the carbon fiber rods helped stability a lot more than the laminated part.

  • @toemasmeems

    @toemasmeems

    2 жыл бұрын

    do you have pictures?

  • @billcopeland581
    @billcopeland5812 жыл бұрын

    Am I mistaken but don't you have a seam on all your necks with two different woods? What about the fret board? Using your logic won't those two woods move at two different rates with moisture? Just wondering. BTW, I enjoy your videos.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, and sometimes I can feel the seams. However, they aren’t as obnoxious as along the back of the neck. And btw, I also hate skunk stripes for the same reason.

  • @cheapskate8656

    @cheapskate8656

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes the fretboard can move at a different rate. Generally a fret board moves (shrinks and expands) side to side so rather than a seam appearing it might result in the fret ends protruding more than they originally did. That assume a flat sawn fretboard. The neck timbers also shrink in the same way. You will feel the seam on the back of the neck ie the quarter sawn bit but you might not feel anything at the end of the head. Not sure its making sense but the timber generally shrinks/moves very little in total length.

  • @deathsyth27
    @deathsyth272 жыл бұрын

    I'm a cabinet maker by trade and I went to college for woodworking, the course focused more on industrial woodworking. All that to say is I'm not a Luther, to me building, at least a solid body guitar looks like it would be fun to build once and maybe that's it. But this was a great video, glad the algorithm suggested it. What little I know about guitars and based on the fact that, and in videos I've watched, that you can get guitars where the neck is just held in place with a metal plate and some screws, we are not talking about huge amounts of tension. The difference in construction is probably negligible. The one thing I would challenge people on in woodworking in general is the need to flip grains to balance wood movement. At least for indoor only builds, with modern homes the yearly changes in humidity are negligible. Now with a guitar that may be out on the road or in all sorts of places all the time this may matter more.

  • @TimatorA
    @TimatorAАй бұрын

    100% agree. I also prefer the tone of wood, rather than glue walls

  • @ferguspage9112
    @ferguspage91122 жыл бұрын

    Hey Chris, thanks for bringing up this topic. I'm always interested in your opinions on technique/technology. I'm in the laminated camp myself, mostly because I enjoy alternating-species designs, pinstripes, etc. - which are all (nearly) impossible without lamination. While the opposing-and-symmetrically-arranged grain seems to be a factor that would contribute to stiffness and stability, I think another important factor is the arrangement of glue joints within a multilaminate neck. I imagine that the glue-filled sections of the laminated strips adjacent to a glue seam will be slightly higher in density and slightly less flexible than the un-glued interior portion. Purely speculatively, the glue joints should act akin to rebar in concrete, and depending on the joint arrangement, like an I or T beam. I have made some 36" scale necks that I can stand on, hugging a beam of lumber, without deviating the neck with my weight. This is anecdotal only. I agree that there is a lack of a good body of measured proof about this sort of thing. I know Carvin (now Kiesel) Guitars did a measurement display of neck stiffness in a vlog/promo/live-stream at some point. I wouldn't be surprised if Ken Parker has private research and archives on this - he does some really interesting softwood/synthetic laminations. He doesn't do anything without a considered reason, so I'm sure he could explain the advantage in his case.

  • @ferguspage9112

    @ferguspage9112

    2 жыл бұрын

    Of course, all the benefits of a laminated neck assume perfect execution. If you aren't thorough in the jointing phase; don't clamp your pieces evenly, securely, squarely; if you add tension, curve or twist in the clamping phase; if you starve the joint of glue; if you over-fill the joint and don't re-tighten your clamps when the glue squeezes out; or if the edges aren't perfectly flush (if I can hold the pieces together with light pressure and see light coming through the seam, I am not satisfied yet), then your neck will not be an ideal blank. Assume that your ideal neck blank of any kind is solid, rigid, without internal checks, with straight grain and minimal runout, no bias or twist, and no inclusions or features that will render it weak in a certain way. I think that a decent, pretty-good, very-good, or excellent one piece neck will be closer to the ideal than a decent or pretty-good laminate neck. There are lots of ways to go wrong in making a multilaminate neck, and these issues don't even arise in one piece necks. There are also many ways to circumvent the issues inherent in one piece necks. I hope the scientific research side of this goes far enough to put this to rest, but I also expect that we will disregard the results and continue arguing/tweaking until it's right

  • @krma1970
    @krma19702 жыл бұрын

    Good points. My oldest guitar neck build is now 12 years old. Never built laminated, living 8km from Atlantic ocean and not a single twist or issue of any kind on mahogany or maple necks. With a decent fingerboard thickness and dual action trusrod, I guess my claims will still be true in another 12 years, let's see. And I kept the unused sides of all necks I built over time, so yes, I will consider using all these leftovers to laminate some more necks, mainly for economy reasons. Additionnaly, I own an Ibanez s540 Fujigen era, it's not laminated, single maple piece, only the classic 45° headstock cut, and it is straight as hell after 32 years. So... :-)

  • @remingtonatcheson8106
    @remingtonatcheson81062 жыл бұрын

    Why do you think they now use LVL beams instead of 2x10's?

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    To make guitar necks? 😉

  • @remingtonatcheson8106

    @remingtonatcheson8106

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitars that's a great response lol

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@remingtonatcheson8106 More on this in tomorrow's video.

  • @BeesKneesBenjamin
    @BeesKneesBenjamin2 жыл бұрын

    Through your eyes I've probably gotten incredibly lucky, but I have multiple basses with laminated necks with different species of wood. The oldest one is from the late 70s and none have separating glue joints, neither are the joints noticeable by feel... They also seem to have much better stability, never have to set them up compared to my basses with solid necks (no matter what finish either), and they stay amazingly in tune. Besides my own observations, I can't really believe you said there's no research done to wood laminates... Its so incredibly well researched, ESPECIALLY in construction it's used for its stability. It's also not rare to see different types of woods being laminated together either in certain types of plywood etc. Whether it's a support beam in a building, the leg of a chair, or a guitar neck, the same idea still applies. The more different pieces a laminate consists of, the more solid and stable it will be. I vividly remember a hardwood floor we had in the past. It was made from solid wood, in the summers the boards would lie tightly together but in the winters gaps started to appear and some boards started to warp. After a while it got replaced by a laminate where every board was made of plywood with half a centimeter of veneer on top. We've never had wobbly floorboards ever again!

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was referring to research specific to laminated guitar necks. The building and construction industry is governed by regulations, which are enforced through a rigorous inspection process. The reason for this level of scrutiny is because people can be injured or killed if a building collapses. Therefore, the building and construction industry is limited in the choice of materials and construction techniques they can use. They have to use what has been proven to work. The guitar industry has no such limitations. If luthiers had to face such scrutiny, they would have to select from a limited, yet proven range of materials and techniques to make laminated necks. Since human life and safety isn't an issue with laminated guitar necks, a luthier will never have to face that level of scrutiny. That's good for creativity, but bad for quality assurance. I know for a fact that many of the big guitar companies involved in making laminated necks have done a lot of research on the subject. However, that research is proprietary and not available in the public domain. That's why Ibanez in 2022 can make laminated necks that work.

  • @lumberlikwidator8863
    @lumberlikwidator88632 жыл бұрын

    I have built nine guitars, and in eight of them all wooden parts were made from scratch in my shop. (I used one Mighty Mite neck in one guitar.). My experience is that the species of wood used is more important than wood grain orientation. I believe that Maple and cherry wood necks are the best, even if they are flat sawn.

  • @julianbeyer733
    @julianbeyer7333 күн бұрын

    My 3- and 5-piece Ibanez necks are far more stiff then my 1-piece Strat necks. Tested by pushing agains the backside of the headstock and listen to the notes getting flat.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    3 күн бұрын

    @@julianbeyer733 Ibanez knows how to make laminate necks the right way.

  • @julianbeyer733

    @julianbeyer733

    3 күн бұрын

    @@HighlineGuitarsyeah they know how to✌🏻

  • @JonLYF
    @JonLYF2 жыл бұрын

    I think if laminated necks done right it should have no seems. Ibanez is good example. If the wood has been dry properly it should not expand when humidy changes. Using wood like roasted maple is even better. Although no theory supports laminated neck is stronger but if laminated are glued on multiple layers says 5 layers, it would means there are glues in between. We all know titebond once dry it is stronger than wood. So it make sense if the neck are stronger with laminated neck. I have seen 6 strings bass with laminated neck that are strong and doesn't move at all after many years.

  • @stimpsonjcat26
    @stimpsonjcat262 жыл бұрын

    For a laminated neck to be more stable it would need the grain to go in multiple directions like plywood. If the grain is going in the same direction it will only be slightly more stable then the weakest piece and slightly less stable than the strongest piece.

  • @thomaslthomas1506
    @thomaslthomas15062 жыл бұрын

    My experience with wood laminates being more stable or about the same. BTW I don’t typically make necks and the few I’ve made were solid wood. However I make a lot of wood countertops. Everything from 24” wide slabs to butcher block type. Certain woods are not terribly stable white birch comes to mind. I would never make a solid neck out of it, I’m sure it would be fine laminated, I would make the layers fairly thin also. Another wood that comes to mind I’d hophorn beam. It’s incredibly stable and strong no need to laminate it. I made a neck out of some and never even put a truss rod worked fine, neck dive was an issue 🤔

  • @jbratt
    @jbratt2 жыл бұрын

    I’m not a luthier but I am a woodworker. Plywood is much more stable compared to solid wood. That being said, I think I would prefer a really good single piece of wood for a neck over a laminated one. The esthetics alone would be enough for the single piece and well, seems like you need to tune a guitar every time you pick it up anyway no matter how it’s built. Finding that solid wood that is just right may be really challenging.

  • @chingonbass

    @chingonbass

    2 жыл бұрын

    What about a million ply endgrain plywood neck?

  • @rocpile2517
    @rocpile2517 Жыл бұрын

    The guitars that Doug Irwin built for Jerry Garcia 40 and 50 years ago are 7 ply necks and these guitars are still used today and are as solid and playable as the day they were built. No seams or any problems. Especially Tiger which was played for more then 10 years on the road at more then a 1000 long shows and was used for the entire show. Well worn and still rock solid. Just sayin . . .

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    Жыл бұрын

    Those necks were made correctly. Many of the laminated necks produced by amateurs are not made correctly. That's what I'm saying...

  • @Beelzybud
    @Beelzybud2 жыл бұрын

    My 50+ year old Ovation has 5 laminates. Neck is still stable but yes I can feel the seams. Never bothered me.

  • @konradkoeppe2840
    @konradkoeppe28402 жыл бұрын

    For a floyd rose guitar laminated necks really are the way to go. Worked on many over the years. Laminated really helps neck stability. But i understand its not for everyone.

  • @thomasbennett4853
    @thomasbennett48532 жыл бұрын

    I see the potential for varying rates of expansion and contraction between wood species. However after making many pieces of furniture and guitars using a mixture of woods I have never had one wood expanding or contracting at a different rate from a different species which is adjoining it. Just my experience.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 жыл бұрын

    I see it all the time. Especially if the finish has a high luster. Then the seams really stand out. I have also had people ask me how to fix bad laminations so I’m not the only person who has noticed this.

  • @daviddecker2324
    @daviddecker23242 жыл бұрын

    You do nice very work. But I prefer laminated necks. I actually made a neck that is eight thin laminations of maple from repurposed rifle stocks. I put a nice thick ebony board on it It's the most stable neck I own. Let me know and I'll send pics.

  • @JoeKyser
    @JoeKyser2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah when I make Lam necks I dont kid myself. Its only for an artistic aesthetic and thats it

  • @PatrickJWenzel
    @PatrickJWenzel2 жыл бұрын

    25 years ago I made a bread cutting board for a school tech project. I used plantation grown softwood (Australian Pine), hardwood (Meranti-Durian), and PVA glue (Selley’s Aquadhere). Never have I shown so much disrespect to a timber utensil. It’s been washed, soaked, dried, rarely oiled and it’s held up to Australia’s seasonal temperature and moisture fluctuations. It’s doing alright.

  • @WoodworkerDan

    @WoodworkerDan

    7 ай бұрын

    Same here. Where I live (Michigan) we have humid summers and very dry winter, and the maple/walnut cutting boards that I have built have endured years of abuse.

  • @angryroostercreations5194
    @angryroostercreations5194 Жыл бұрын

    Most of the necks that I've built have been laminated, but that is mostly due to wood selection. Most hard maple i have access to is surfaced 4/4 so maximum possible thickness is no greater than 13/16. I've always thought that for lamination the optimum would be a 2 piece neck made from a 6/4 flat sawn board that would be ripped and book matched. That idea is not really from a lutherie perspective, but more from furniture/cabinet making practice. That is often considered the optimum way to make panels and wood tops. Most of the time though door panels and tops are not book matched, they're simply glued up with opposing grain. It only really becomes a mandatory thing on exterior door panels where the wood will be subject to major temp and humidity changes. If i was to bet on the theory of a laminated neck being superior , a 2 piece book matched neck would be the one construction i'd put money on. On the subject of joint expansion, not only can different species expand at different rates, the type of glue you use matters. Some glues cold creep over time. the glue itself expands, and will grow out of the joint. Tightbond II does this. I use the original Tightbond and have not seen it cold creep. The water resistant glues aren't necessary for guitar construction anyways, since the amount of water necessary for joint failure would cause catastrophic damage to the instrument before the glue joints fail.

  • @castleanthrax1833
    @castleanthrax18332 жыл бұрын

    I don't have an opinion either way, but on the "environmentally responsible" argument for laminated necks, you would also have to take into account the use of the glue, and everything associated with that as well. If in using the wood responsibly, you had to use glue that was extremely bad for the environment (in any way) you have negated your gain.

  • @mmaviator22
    @mmaviator222 ай бұрын

    Id say we need to ask ppl like Jeff Kiesel and the likes who do beautiful multi peace necks and see what the reliability is long term. Bc Ive always loved the look, and I may not be corrected but hasnt fender always done this with the walnut strip? Im not a luthier, so idk that may not be what you mean by laminated neck. Id love to find out though.

  • @HighlineGuitars

    @HighlineGuitars

    2 ай бұрын

    Technically, the Fender skunk stripe is a cover and not a laminate. That being said, skunk stripes can suffer the same drawbacks as laminates in that the seams can sometimes be felt. Kiesel Guitars make excellent laminated necks because They know how to make them correctly.

  • @mmaviator22

    @mmaviator22

    2 ай бұрын

    @HighlineGuitars thank you for tue reply. It makes sense that when doing something to that level every part is critical from ensuring properly dried wood, to building it properly. I can definitely see inexperienced builders or sloppy/rush builders messing this up.

  • @JethroBoDean
    @JethroBoDean2 жыл бұрын

    As an aesthetic preference I like the laminated neck look such as ibanez panga panga purple heart walnut maple etc.... all hard woods and I beleive that almost all have carbon fiber reinforced at least the premium to prestige ones do I may be wrong any way the aesthetic is a draw for,me

  • @grimoirworkshop6623
    @grimoirworkshop66232 жыл бұрын

    I (aspiring guitar builder, just finished my first one) honestly think that neck stability should be a concern only for touring musicians, as for bedroom guitarists like myself it boils down to adjusting neck twice a year when seasons change. I have never experienced neck straying out on any of guitars that that I own (all single piece, both maple and mahogany necks are present) and the one that I built. Other topic. I made that neck out of two mirror matched pieces of reclaimed mystery wood I made body of (no idea what it is, looks kinda like mahogany but significantly darker and slightly tinted red/purple, and heavier ) and a strip of 18mm hi quality birch plywood in center (it’s quite expensive to source quality wood here in Israel) thus making it superlaminated of 21 layers lol. (Though 9 of them add nothing to strength of the neck as they are cross grain oriented) It holds .010 strings on 25” scale perfectly stable and does not shift with turning on and off the ac (and it’s Israeli summer btw :) )

  • @grimoirworkshop6623

    @grimoirworkshop6623

    2 жыл бұрын

    Will see in a year or two where it goes, will the seams become an issue or (hopefully) not. But the looks, man, it looks really nice, and that’s the most (after being actually playable) important part of the electric guitar

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