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New wood for fretboards?

Neat. I don’t think fretboards need to be any harder though!

Speaking of, ever cut down locust? Now that is some tough friggin wood.
 
Yes, this "superwood" is the topic de-jour on all the guitar forums right now.

But bear in mind its intended purpose is to compete with steel as a building material. It is touted as being "6 x lighter", but that means 6x lighter than steel! Steel weighs about 15x more than your average guitar wood, so that is gonna make a brick house of a guitar.

I don't see a lot of applications for guitar.
 
But bear in mind its intended purpose is to compete with steel as a building material. It is touted as being "6 x lighter", but that means 6x lighter than steel! Steel weighs about 15x more than your average guitar wood, so that is gonna make a brick house of a guitar.

Just when you thought Gibson couldn’t possibly make the Les Paul any heavier…
 
Speaking of hard fretboard woods - what about Richlite. If not technically a wood, it makes great fretboards. It's made from layers of engineered paper infused with thermosetting resin, pressed and cut into shape. It is very stable, hard, and sustainable. I believe Martin, Gibson and Strandberg have used it for fretboards. It is the source of controversy among guitar traditionalists (who even have trouble with superior tone woods like Pau Ferro - like I use on Pinter guitars - because it doesn't look like Rosewood or Ebony.) Richlite can look like black ebony but is more stable and harder.

@aarontunes, does Warmoth have any plans to use it? Or does it already and I'm just out of the loop?
 
Speaking of hard fretboard woods - what about Richlite. If not technically a wood, it makes great fretboards. It's made from layers of engineered paper infused with thermosetting resin, pressed and cut into shape. It is very stable, hard, and sustainable. I believe Martin, Gibson and Strandberg have used it for fretboards. It is the source of controversy among guitar traditionalists (who even have trouble with superior tone woods like Pau Ferro - like I use on Pinter guitars - because it doesn't look like Rosewood or Ebony.) Richlite can look like black ebony but is more stable and harder.

@aarontunes, does Warmoth have any plans to use it? Or does it already and I'm just out of the loop?
I have one Richlite fretboard and it’s so perfectly uniformly black it almost is uncanny. With how difficult and expensive it is to either source or stain a uniform chunk of ebony, I hope to see many manufacturers moving towards it as a sustainable replacement.
 
Speaking of hard fretboard woods - what about Richlite. If not technically a wood, it makes great fretboards. It's made from layers of engineered paper infused with thermosetting resin, pressed and cut into shape. It is very stable, hard, and sustainable. I believe Martin, Gibson and Strandberg have used it for fretboards. It is the source of controversy among guitar traditionalists (who even have trouble with superior tone woods like Pau Ferro - like I use on Pinter guitars - because it doesn't look like Rosewood or Ebony.) Richlite can look like black ebony but is more stable and harder.

@aarontunes, does Warmoth have any plans to use it? Or does it already and I'm just out of the loop?
My 2007 LP Supreme has a Richlite board.

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