Just curious. Seen this pop up a few times lately. Generally, what thickness constitutes a quot;topquot; rather than a veneer?
Thanks;
Artie
I usually see veneer as a flimsy peice of wood, less than 1/8 of an inch thick. Top I see as a peice of wood thick enough to effect the tone noticably. Generally 1/4 of an inch or thicker.
To me a Veneer is anything under 1/8quot;...
I'm no luthier, but I say it's veneer if you can bend it fairly easily.
Ok, thanks for the info. Let me take this one step farther - if I put a quot;layerquot; of wood on top of a body, that was 3/16quot;, would you call that a veneer? It would be purely for cosmetic purposes, but would it affect the tone?
I'd call it a veneer. Something that thin would have no noticable affect on tone. Esp. if it's purely for cosmetic purposes.
Actually, 3/16quot; WOULD already have an effect on tone, just not nearly as defined as a thicker Top such as that on a Les Paul... Tom Anderson does a good job of explaining it in the drop top section of his site (or at least he used to)
Ok, lemme change my answer. 3/16 would not have an effect on tone that I myself would not be able to hear.
- Jan 22 Sat 2011 21:03
quot;Topquot; or veneer?
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