warcripp said:I am familiar to how alder and ash sounds but where does poplar fall into the mix? I play blues rock stuff tele body.
drewfx said:I would say poplar "tastes likechickenalder".
I don't know, maybe someone will say it's a little less resonant or something, but my experience leads me to wonder if I could tell them apart - even acoustically/unplugged.
DMRACO said:sounds the same...poplar is VERY soft. I would stick to alder if I had a choice.
Cagey said:DMRACO said:sounds the same...poplar is VERY soft. I would stick to alder if I had a choice.
Right. Poplar is technically a hardwood, but it's not very hard. Oddly enough, Balsa is technically a hardwood, too. I don't think anybody would call that "hard" <grin>
DMRACO said:sounds the same...poplar is VERY soft. I would stick to alder if I had a choice.
SkuttleFunk said:I use a 22" x 15" x 1.75" sized body blank for one of my 5-string bass models that's available in Poplar or Alder. I consistently find that the Poplar blank is just under 4 ounces heavier than the Alder blank. Both have a very similar tap tone ring
Crimson Guitars said:In my experience there is practically no difference, but then the density, and therefore tone, of wood varies even depending on where it came from in the tree.. I'm building a detachable twin neck guitar in poplar right now and the wood is spalted, therefore lighter than standard poplar, my advice is never to generalise you really need to hold each chunk of wood, tap it and get to know it before deciding.. if you're interested the twin neck is in my workshop diary here http://crimsonguitars.com/workshop-diary/270212
Crimson Guitars said:In my experience there is practically no difference, but then the density, and therefore tone, of wood varies even depending on where it came from in the tree.. I'm building a detachable twin neck guitar in poplar right now and the wood is spalted, therefore lighter than standard poplar, my advice is never to generalise you really need to hold each chunk of wood, tap it and get to know it before deciding.. if you're interested the twin neck is in my workshop diary here http://crimsonguitars.com/workshop-diary/270212
Love your work!Crimson Guitars said:In my experience there is practically no difference, but then the density, and therefore tone, of wood varies even depending on where it came from in the tree.. I'm building a detachable twin neck guitar in poplar right now and the wood is spalted, therefore lighter than standard poplar, my advice is never to generalise you really need to hold each chunk of wood, tap it and get to know it before deciding.. if you're interested the twin neck is in my workshop diary here http://crimsonguitars.com/workshop-diary/270212