joe white wrote:
You told him that the new one may sound different to him since it has not been set up the way he wants. It's likely that without the setup, the strings are higher above the soundboard and sound hole and therefore it has a little more volume and bass. It is also likely that it just sounds different because it is different. Same shape but the two guitars have woods that are in no way identical other than name. Sound is so subjective. I've played guitars before and thought they were muddy with no clarity only to hand them off to a fellow player that thought the same guitar sounded a bit thin and bright. Huh? Different ears, different hands and fingers.
You nailed it Bro well done. Here is a cut-n-paste of my actual email to him, he will be at our place sometime tomorrow with both guitars. You hit all the big points, well done!
"Hey *******, Hesh here and I hope that you are doing great!
Congrats on the new ax, very cool.
So here are the considerations in an effort to accurately set your expectations as correctly as possible.
Not only will two guitars of the same model, maker and perhaps made right next to each other perhaps sound somewhat differently if you also add in that they were both built with wood from the same tree they still may sound differently. There will be similarities but there will never be any guarantees what the outcome in terms of this elusive thing called tone might be.
Wood is not homogeneous by any means and as a builder myself who built 54 1/2 guitars often with the same wood from the same trees the results were all different and like people who share a heritage or genetics they are all individuals.
Some of the differences in bass and volume are likely that one has been dialed in and set-up and the other hasn't, My hunch is that we can make them sound more the same but no guarantees because again wood is different even from the same tree.
The one that has not been set-up if it has slightly higher action it will have more bass and volume. An acoustic guitar bridge works by string tension torquing the saddle (rocking a bit) and that gets transmitted to the top and the top and back act on that energy like a fireplace bellows and that's the volume that results. Higher action, more torque on the bridge, more rock and more volume. Bass sucks up much more power from an instrument than treble and this is true of our amps and speakers too. Takes very little wattage to produce treble but lots of wattage to produce bass.
So sorry for being pedantic ****** but I think that you appreciate the details here and it's part of explaining what's possible and whats not.
With all this said my hunch is that if we set-up guitar 2 to perfectly match the set-up I did on guitar 1 they will sound a bit more alike, perhaps a lot more alike and the volume will more closely match. There are no guarantees though. Tone is very subjective.
So why don't you bring them both in so I can use guitar 1 as a reference and match it's set-up specs with guitar 2. We can also go over guitar 2 with a fine tooth comb and make certain that the saddle is not binding, the saddle slot is truly flat and all the little tweaks that we do to milk tone from a guitar.
This would just be a set-up and if I have it on any day you can have it back the next business day. We are open M, W, F 10 - 4 and if it's F I would call first Dave is in and out on Friday a lot.
We are both fully vaccinated, boosted and wearing quality masks and I am sure you are too. You don't need an appointment with us, ever but we do say appointments required on our web site.
Hope this helps, congrats and I think we can narrow the gap in tone between the two I just want you to have your expectations accurately set that wood is very variable and that makes chasing an exact tone at times futile but lets try to get it dialed in anyway. My hope is that we can get them very close. Age and usage change tone too so lots of variables here.
Hesh"