Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 I'm thinking about having a custom Heritage built and a friend of mine has these rosewood blanks that he is offering to me to use if I want. They came from a Luther in Kalamazoo who has since retired. The boards came in plastic bags from a supplier in Canada.... We are not sure how old they are? The label on each bag says "old rosewood fretboards for guitar" Here are all 4 together... What I am trying to determine is if one or all of these might be Brazilian rosewood? So wood experts, time to test your skills..... HERE IS #1 this one is the second darkest and second heaviest of the 4
Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Author Posted November 1, 2013 HERE IS #2 this is the darkest and heaviest of the 4
Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Author Posted November 1, 2013 THIS IS #3 a little lighter in color and weight than 1 & 2
Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Author Posted November 1, 2013 AND #4 lightest of the 4 in color and weight
cmatthes Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 Honestly?You can't tell the difference between Brazilian and Indian or any other kind of rosewood by pictures.
Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Author Posted November 1, 2013 Honestly?You can't tell the difference between Brazilian and Indian or any other kind of rosewood by pictures.oh really?I thought you could?tells ya how much I know
django49 Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 If not otherwise authenticated, I think you need to test how fast they burn.
Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Author Posted November 1, 2013 A buddy on the HOC just sent me this...I had no idea???For suspected samples of Brazilian Rosewood, take a small test tube or other small transparent container and fill it with some shavings, (a handplane works great for this), and then fill the remainder of the container with water and shake it up for a few seconds. Bring the container under the blacklight and observe the results: true Brazilian Rosewood (Dalbergia nigra) will not fluoresce or show any appreciable change of color under the blacklight, while most other rosewoods will glow a pale blue/green color
carfish7 Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 They look cool. Why does it matter if they are Brazilian or otherwise, especially if they are already in hand? Oh wait, I guess I know why.......
sixesandsevens Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 If not otherwise authenticated, I think you need to test how fast they burn. That's some funny stuff right there. A buddy on the HOC just sent me this...I had no idea??? For suspected samples of Brazilian Rosewood, take a small test tube or other small transparent container and fill it with some shavings, (a handplane works great for this), and then fill the remainder of the container with water and shake it up for a few seconds. Bring the container under the blacklight and observe the results: true Brazilian Rosewood (Dalbergia nigra) will not fluoresce or show any appreciable change of color under the blacklight, while most other rosewoods will glow a pale blue/green color That's really cool if true. Great info. Now, which guitar do I start shaving down to make glow-stick juice...
mirrorimij Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 scratch & sniffYup. It has a distinct smell.
Bobby Marshall Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 All I see is four new guitars. Look nice.
veatch Posted November 1, 2013 Posted November 1, 2013 scratch & sniffYup. It has a distinct smell.This.
Brentrocks Posted November 1, 2013 Author Posted November 1, 2013 the water turned a pale green for all 4 of them under a blacklight, so I guess they are all Indian rosewood.
crunchee Posted November 2, 2013 Posted November 2, 2013 The boards you've got there in the photos look nice to me. On top of that, they don't look like roasted maple like some do nowadays. Stay away from the cork sniffers and enjoy what you've got.
cmatthes Posted November 2, 2013 Posted November 2, 2013 scratch & sniffYup. It has a distinct smell.Exactly.
veatch Posted November 2, 2013 Posted November 2, 2013 Try it on that 56 les Paul. I'm pretty sure that would have a braz board.
veatch Posted November 2, 2013 Posted November 2, 2013 With Cites, you may be better off that it is Indian. I think to have someone actually build something with it, you would have to show a paper trail of how it went from tree to "in your possession". Could be very hard to do unless the friend you got them from has that information...Like I said, I could be wrong, but that's what I remember from when i read this stuff in the past...
ghamerinfrance Posted November 4, 2013 Posted November 4, 2013 If not otherwise authenticated, I think you need to test how fast they burn. Burning with Coconut, without coconut and if burning, do they sink afterwards...Its very important....
ptm1diver Posted November 5, 2013 Posted November 5, 2013 Then if they are Indian you could be in real trouble. To avoid a possible raid by the Feds (like Gibson) send them all my way.
Citrus Posted November 8, 2013 Posted November 8, 2013 I remember either PRS or another builder showing the difference on a youtube video, just by the tone when the wood was tapped with his knuckle.The rosewood had more of a "bell-like" tone rather than just a woody klunkfor what its worth
mc2 Posted November 10, 2013 Posted November 10, 2013 HERE IS #2 this is the darkest and heaviest of the 4 Hard to tell by color.....usually, the one with the biggest boobs and nicest ass is the Brazilian
cmatthes Posted November 11, 2013 Posted November 11, 2013 I remember either PRS or another builder showing the difference on a youtube video, just by the tone when the wood was tapped with his knuckle.The rosewood had more of a "bell-like" tone rather than just a woody klunkfor what its worthIt was probably Paul. I remember going to an open house at the PRS factory about a dozen years ago and Paul demonstrating the knock test. He explained the similarity to the wood used for marimbas having a more musical quality, etc. For the rest of the afternoon, I watched the goofiest shit, as a bunch of non-players knocked every piece of wood in the joint, declaring one more "musical" than the previous. What a bunch of asshole dipshits...
Question
Brentrocks
I'm thinking about having a custom Heritage built and a friend of mine has these rosewood blanks that he is offering to me to use if I want.
They came from a Luther in Kalamazoo who has since retired. The boards came in plastic bags from a supplier in Canada....
We are not sure how old they are? The label on each bag says "old rosewood fretboards for guitar"
Here are all 4 together...
What I am trying to determine is if one or all of these might be Brazilian rosewood? So wood experts, time to test your skills.....
HERE IS #1
this one is the second darkest and second heaviest of the 4
26 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.