Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Maple or rosewood neck/fretboard?


basstech
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hmmm... Buy an ACG with an acrylicised (sp) fingerboard then you aren't limited to certain more stable woods and maple won't get quickly grubby.

Tone differences? marginal at best in my opinion.

Wenge is nice. Balsa anyone?

How about this one though?

[url=http://peterb4407.smugmug.com/Other/SmugShots/20297576_MJZnTm#!i=3135566933&k=nTGRb8x&lb=1&s=A][/url]

Peter

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I`ve always gravitated to rosewood boards, but my new band both requires a twangier sound, and we play venues where the lights can be aimed rather awkwardly, so a maple board helps on both fronts - though re the twangier part, not sure how much translates into the mix, but it makes me feel better, and that`s what counts. Certainly being able to see what I`m playing is a real bonus.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One thing you ought to consider. I have had many Fender basses, most of which have been rosewood, but I have had the odd maple one here and there.

When I am playing at a gig I find it easier to see the frets on a rosewood board than a maple one. I find the lighting can reflect off of a maple board and make it more difficult to see the frets.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Lozz196' timestamp='1395513889' post='2403309']
...bright lights really dazzle me and can find the black-spot on a light background easier than light-spot on dark.
[size=4][/quote][/size]
[quote name='gsgbass' timestamp='1395518500' post='2403366']
...Go fretless, and you don't worry about lighting.
[/quote]

If you're looking at the fretboard you need to practice more! ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='GremlinAndy' timestamp='1335275671' post='1628441']
Maple is chosen for it's properties for the neck and rosewood for the fingerboard for different reasons. I don't think that making a rosewood neck with maple fingerboard would yeild a desirable neck tbh. Maybe an actual lutier could explain why that isn't done...?
I have offered my opinion on a single Fender P with minimal differences ...Same body, same pick-ups the same strings, with a swapped out neck and I can say that, that was definitely enough for *me* to form an opinion.
I have many basses which all sound different too, but I agree with what you say, that's not such a useful test for forming opinions.
[/quote]

Never heard of a rosewood neck with a maple board, but there is this:

http://www.bassdirect.co.uk/bass_guitar_specialists/SR5_Rosewood_neck,_White.html

Looks nice, but must weigh a ton!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you had a stainless steel neck you'd expect it to make the bass sound bright as the material is so hard.

Maple is a hard wood, rosewood even harder, ebony hardest of all. The string runs from the bridge to the metal frets. The tone difference of the string when held against a metal fret set in hard wood or marginally harder wood is going to be marginal, if at all audible/measurable.

Maple looks brighter and so may give the impression of sounding brighter than rosewood but is slightly less hard and so is more likely to give a less bright sound. A layer of lacquer on the maple is young to keep it clean but not much else.

The Fender maple fingerboards used to be one piece as cutting the frets directly into the maple neck was cheaper than adding a separate, harder fingerboard. The skunk stripe was from the truss rod being added to the back of the neck instead of the front. Nowadays, as has been posted, the process for standard basses is uniform, either a maple or rosewood fingerboard is stuck over the front mounted truss rod (same for both MM and Fender and, it seems, everyone else).

I believe there would be a difference between these modern necks with separate finger boards and the older one piece necks, but not so much in tone but in resonance. Almost any solid maple bass neck has a resonance on the 5th fret of the G string in which the body/neck system absorbs vibrations to give a short sustain and a bit of buzz against your belly. With any composite construction this will be compromised and so the is sustain more even across the strings and frets.

Also, Mr Letts is perfectly correct when he says that rosewood holds the fret tangs better than the softer maple.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I struggle to see how it would make a discernable difference on a fretted bass when at the end of the day your fingers are putting pressure on a string to jam it onto a fret. I guess you can feel a bit of the board at each side, maybe more so with the narrower gauge strings. But if you play with a light touch then I guess less so.

On a fretless I think it does make a difference in feel. FWIW My two fretted basses have acrylic impregnated maple boards. Dead easy to clean if they get a bit grubby. Look nicer than rosewood for me although YMMV :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...