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The flat, angled part of the fingerboard under the E string


Ray
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[quote name='Doddy' post='685273' date='Dec 15 2009, 03:14 PM']It's known as the 'Romberg Bevel', and is to allow
the E string to have more room to vibrate.
It's kind of a throw back to the days of large gauge strings.[/quote]
Thanks Doddy!

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  • 3 years later...

With modern steel strings, basses may not need the Romberg Bevel. But the bevel was developed when all there was were gut strings. To get a gut string the diameter it needs to be to be an E string, it is huge by comparison, and still doesn't have the tension modern steel or synthetic core strings have, so the string excursion is quite substantial.

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Because the E string is much thicker, when it gets vibrating it needs its more space than the other strings . The idea of Romberg bevel is to make string crossing easier especially with an underhand grip with of a German bow . Removing some wood to the fingerboard from under the string with the bevel means that the bridge doesn't need to be as curved which keeps the bow angle and the arm just that bit further out from the body on a down bow!

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