Longfellow Guitars
Moderator: Ghost Hip
- skullservant
- IAMILFFAMOUS
- Posts: 16575
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2011 12:55 am
Re: Longfellow Guitars
Now do you think there would be a huge difference in weight between a milled/welded neck and a cast neck?
- lapsteel
- experienced
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- Joined: Thu Aug 25, 2011 8:31 am
Re: Longfellow Guitars
I welded aluminum for a few years, and being familiar with both cast and billet, it would be tough for me to understand why a smaller manufacturer would cast aluminum for a neck. It will be porous a rough and would require alot of milling to get it to a finished neck....offsetting any cost benefit of casting, especially at those low production numbers. It would be cleaner an faster to simply weld a neck from two pieces.
- harvester
- involved
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- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2012 9:26 am
Re: Longfellow Guitars
it would be tough for me to understand why a smaller manufacturer would cast aluminum for a neck
i guess gary kramer had seen the incredibly labour intensive process at TB first-hand ( ie billet spun on a lathe and whittled down on a 70s era manual mill ) ... so had their necks cast by a third party ? anyone know more detail ??
i can't imagine getting small numbers of parts cast cheaply/reliably unless i knew someone in the industry.
welding the component parts sure makes sense to me.
Now do you think there would be a huge difference in weight between a milled/welded neck and a cast neck?
i don't think there's an actual weight difference by the way - though as i understand it, cast metals are more brittle, so their design requires thicker sections ( also to allow for shrinkage in every direction ) which add to the weight in the end and limit the design possibilities.
AP