English Walnut

Species, bending tips, filling tips, experience with less common tonewoods, native substitutes for tropical hardwoods, milling, etc.
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Stray Feathers
Posts: 795
Joined: Sun Sep 08, 2013 11:39 pm
Location: Ladysmith, BC

English Walnut

Post by Stray Feathers »

I belong to a woodworkers guild which mills donated logs (much of it backyard trees taken down and donated) and sells it to members at very good prices. They get a fair bit of what I think must be English Walnut, grown for the edible nuts. I have read one opinion in Tonewood Data Source that it is good tonewood, but not much more. Does anyone have any experience with it, especially to compare it with Black Walnut? Janka is higher in English Walnut which might make a difference. Bruce W.
phavriluk
Posts: 655
Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2012 9:49 pm

Re: English Walnut

Post by phavriluk »

My opinion: back-and-side wood species have way less influence over acoustic performance than how thick the wood is, the size of the guitar, and how its was braced. It'll all sound like a guitar and I'd love to see documented proof of claims that this guitar sounds as it does because of the back-and-side species.

If you like the looks of a selection of wood, use it in good health knowing that it'll work just fine.
peter havriluk
bftobin
Posts: 70
Joined: Sun Aug 24, 2014 12:27 pm

Re: English Walnut

Post by bftobin »

First: While at Sergei De Jonge school, he stated that it really doesn't make much difference what the B&S are. He's been building with all kinds of wood since the 1960s. He once built a guitar entirely from spruce. Basically, most softer woods will be like Mahogany, and harder woods will be like Rosewoods. Secondly: It depended on internal dampening. Some woods dampen vibrations more than others. This is why 90% of the time, Ebony is better for fingerboards and Rosewoods are better for bridges.

Brent
Stray Feathers
Posts: 795
Joined: Sun Sep 08, 2013 11:39 pm
Location: Ladysmith, BC

Re: English Walnut

Post by Stray Feathers »

Many people claim it does not make much difference, but then, you say certain woods are more like mahogany, others more like rosewood. So there must be an audible difference? I can see that some woods are very similar, like different species of walnut, and I may be splitting hairs, just looking for tips when I get this walnut in my shop and dry enough to work with. Bruce W.
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