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Started by speedracer, February 15, 2024, 08:14:28 PM
Quote from: Toddmann on February 18, 2024, 09:14:53 AMMade one yesterday and finished it up this morning. It was really a nice piece of walnut but it blew up on the lathe about 2 inches from the drive side . Well I decided to make a shorty and it turned out great. Sound is there as well.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Meleagris gallopavo on February 18, 2024, 09:15:02 AMI often wonder about Honduras Rosewood (not the burl). I have seen 2 Greg Gwaltney has made and 1 Irvin Whitt made about 2 years ago, but evidently it's not popular, especially for such a highly touted tonewood. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Spitten and drummen on February 18, 2024, 10:35:43 AMWent down this worm hole a long time ago. Talked to a handful of well known trumpet makers that have been turning them for many many years. All of their responses were the same. It's the internals and mouthpiece that makes the difference. I was told that the wood that is picked is more to please the appearance for the owner. The type has very little to do with the sound. To prove this to me , a call maker that's calls are extremely hard to come by had a trumpet he turned out of pine. It was so soft that you could put marks in it with your finger nail. He used his internals and a surgical plastic mp. He played that call and man it sounded really good. He then said that certainly the harder woods are best. It makes the call more vibrant and stands up to hard use vs softer stuff. From then on I completely trust what several of them told me about that. Who knows better than makers turning them for decades.
Quote from: Meleagris gallopavo on February 18, 2024, 11:00:12 AMQuote from: Spitten and drummen on February 18, 2024, 10:35:43 AMWent down this worm hole a long time ago. Talked to a handful of well known trumpet makers that have been turning them for many many years. All of their responses were the same. It's the internals and mouthpiece that makes the difference. I was told that the wood that is picked is more to please the appearance for the owner. The type has very little to do with the sound. To prove this to me , a call maker that's calls are extremely hard to come by had a trumpet he turned out of pine. It was so soft that you could put marks in it with your finger nail. He used his internals and a surgical plastic mp. He played that call and man it sounded really good. He then said that certainly the harder woods are best. It makes the call more vibrant and stands up to hard use vs softer stuff. From then on I completely trust what several of them told me about that. Who knows better than makers turning them for decades.I have been told the same as well, but have been told differently by other well-known trumpet makers too. I really just like calls made out of different woods. To me, the only way to tell a difference between woods is to compare a bunch of calls of different woods made by the same maker using the same internals. Even then, individual pieces of wood of the same species will have different tonal qualities. I do think wood species has a greater effect on much larger musical instruments. A trumpet is so small there's really not much room for resonance to reach levels that can be detected between different woods. This is just my opinion...Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: fordhunt on February 19, 2024, 05:00:08 PMAs far as underrated wood for a trumpet imo would be Bocote . I've built many trumpet calls out of Bocote and every single one has been flat out players
Quote from: Yoder409 on February 18, 2024, 05:27:50 AMQuote from: ChesterCopperpot on February 15, 2024, 08:33:50 PMI'd say pretty much all the domestics are underrated.I'm thinking black locust would be a great trumpet wood.Had a piece to give to a maker at Unicoi, but the hand-off never got made. Maybe next year.
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on February 15, 2024, 08:33:50 PMI'd say pretty much all the domestics are underrated.