Australian cedar for soundboard?

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martintaylor
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Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by martintaylor » Sun Aug 11, 2013 3:09 pm

Hi All,

I just received an old piece of recycled Australian Red Cedar from a friend that heard I was making guitars. I have resawn it and have been able to get a lovely set of bookmatched pieces big enough for a top. It is perfectly quarter sawn and already has a lovely tone when tapped.

My question is, is it possible to use it as a top? It is nice and light, really stiff (although I haven't got it down to soundboard thickness yet (still at 6mm) and pretty tightly grained.

I have an old Yamaha Steel string acoustic that has a cedar top but it looks nothing like this piece. This piece is darker and when I wiped some metho on an offcut it is a beautiful golden colour.

I am considering using it on a recycled timber guitar that I already have back and sides for (from a recycled Tassie Oak desk).

Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Martin

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kiwigeo
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by kiwigeo » Sun Aug 11, 2013 4:07 pm

Should make a decent top.....go for it.
Martin

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Tod Gilding
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Tod Gilding » Sun Aug 11, 2013 4:59 pm

Yeah Go For It :) I Know Allan McFarlen has used it for Uke and guitar tops, he may offer some advice. I have used it for back and sides and can't fault it for that purpose, (see my avartar )
Tod



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Allen
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Allen » Sun Aug 11, 2013 5:31 pm

I've used it a few times. Tend to treat it like a mahogany top in that the sound you are going to achieve with using it will certainly be different than spruce.

The pores in it will be enormous, so prepare yourself for some serious pore filling even if you aren't going to go with gloss. They are just too large to leave unfilled.
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martintaylor
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by martintaylor » Sun Aug 11, 2013 9:01 pm

Allen wrote:The pores in it will be enormous, so prepare yourself for some serious pore filling even if you aren't going to go with gloss. They are just too large to leave unfilled.
Hi Allen,

I finish with Danish Oil and wax usually. What do you recommend for pore filling? I've never done it before.

Thanks

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Allen
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Allen » Mon Aug 12, 2013 5:45 am

On the tops I've used, it took 4 sessions of thin epoxy.

I'd recommend using some off cuts to figure out how much you could live with ( or not).
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Peter Young
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Peter Young » Mon Aug 12, 2013 10:22 am

Hello Martin

I used Oz cedar (surian?) for a weissy.

Yes ... needs serious fill. Handle with care ... it is soft.
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Also ... John Maddison did one using Surian
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Both instruments sound fine

Pete
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martintaylor
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by martintaylor » Mon Aug 12, 2013 10:55 am

Thanks Alan and Peter,

Peter, looks like WA Sheoak on those Weissy's for sides (and backs I assume). Nice combination. And Allen, I've been admiring your builds for ages, thanks for the advice.

Martin

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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by jayluthier » Tue Aug 13, 2013 5:33 pm

I've had great success using Australian Red Cedar (Toona) as a top paired with Tasmanian Blackwood B/S for a 00 acoustic. This guitar is about number 60 for me. It is the best sounding 00 that I've ever built. Very balanced sound, good highs and lows, great sustain, rings forever. The Blackwood/Cedar combination really seems to work well.
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DarwinStrings
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by DarwinStrings » Tue Aug 13, 2013 6:47 pm

Now that I find amazing Jay, where did someone from Washington dig up a bit of quarter sawn Aust Red Cedar?

Jim
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by jayluthier » Wed Aug 14, 2013 3:18 am

It's actually Toona. Not only does this timber grow in Australia, but also there is some in Hawaii. That's where I got it from a mate who lived in Hawaii for a few years.
After I consulted with Alan McFarlen, who endorsed it as a tonewood with Blackwood. I went for it.

Incidentally, I lived in Darwin from 1985-1987. I was the territory manager for IBM. We lived in Nightcliffe and our first daughter was born in the Darwin hospital.
After Darwin, then we moved down to Adelaide, where I was IBM branch manager for South Australia.
small world.


cheers,

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P Bill
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by P Bill » Wed Aug 14, 2013 8:07 am

I've used Surrian for tops on a double bass, an archtop, and a viola. Quite happy with the results.
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by DarwinStrings » Wed Aug 14, 2013 8:55 am

jayluthier wrote:It's actually Toona. Not only does this timber grow in Australia, but also there is some in Hawaii. That's where I got it from a mate who lived in Hawaii for a few years.
After I consulted with Alan McFarlen, who endorsed it as a tonewood with Blackwood. I went for it.

Incidentally, I lived in Darwin from 1985-1987. I was the territory manager for IBM. We lived in Nightcliffe and our first daughter was born in the Darwin hospital.
After Darwin, then we moved down to Adelaide, where I was IBM branch manager for South Australia.
small world.


cheers,
Okay, thanks Jay. Toona Ciliata ex Toona Australis, it has quite a history in Australia and though some might say Australia was built on the sheep's back that tree was pretty much up there. I just checked the Hawaii connection and it was introduced there in about 1918.

I am just on the other side of Bagot road to Nightcliff, all my kids were born in Darwin Hospital. I can't understand why anyone leaves Darwin :)

Jim
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Jim Schofield

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colburge
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by colburge » Wed Aug 14, 2013 12:26 pm

DarwinStrings wrote:
I can't understand why anyone leaves Darwin :)

Jim
The heat and humidity :wink:

Cheers

Col

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P Bill
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by P Bill » Wed Aug 14, 2013 2:05 pm

colburge wrote:
DarwinStrings wrote:
I can't understand why anyone leaves Darwin :)

Jim
The heat and humidity :wink:

Cheers

Col
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"Were you drying your nails or waving me good bye?" Tom Waits

Bill

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Kim
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Kim » Mon Aug 19, 2013 12:53 pm

P Bill wrote:
colburge wrote:
DarwinStrings wrote:
I can't understand why anyone leaves Darwin :)

Jim
The heat and humidity :wink:

Cheers

Col
You forgot the Crocs, they seem to be everywhere!
Crocs are probably why Jim can't understand why anyone leaves...they've got the place surrounded. :D

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ebhsbill
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by ebhsbill » Tue Sep 03, 2013 9:21 am

I made a parlour guitar using Australian Red Cedar. The back, sides and soundboard are all ARC. It has a lovely tone and very bright and loud for the size of the guitar. I think the important thing is the timber density. The commercially available cedar has a very open grain. The material I used came out of a set of filing shelves that were over a 150 years old, made from old growth cedar which has a much higher density.

https://plus.google.com/photos/10162495 ... 1384383631

Jules93
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Jules93 » Sat May 04, 2024 10:30 pm

How about as a back and side?
Anyone with an experience

They have red Australian Cedar as a back and side sets to which is absolutely stunning available at guitar tonewoods

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Steve.Toscano
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Steve.Toscano » Sun May 05, 2024 9:53 pm

Jules93 wrote:
Sat May 04, 2024 10:30 pm
How about as a back and side?
Anyone with an experience

They have red Australian Cedar as a back and side sets to which is absolutely stunning available at guitar tonewoods
Ive done a few flamenco builds with Toona(Aus cedar) back and sides. Worked well. However It doesnt bend very well at all, and once bent it doesnt like to hold its new shape. Its also very very soft. It will dint just by looking at it.

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Robert Gleason
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Robert Gleason » Mon May 06, 2024 4:32 am

Plenty of Toon grows here in Hawaii. Some builders use it for uke bodies, and for necks with CF rods. It makes a good sounding uke, but it's only drawback is looks. Koa is king here, and even fairly plain koa has more of a look that people want than the look of toon. Great to work with. Machines easily. I use it for miscellaneous things like kerfing.

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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Jules93 » Mon May 06, 2024 8:47 am

As far as bending that would be done by hand
I’d be building a j45
It’s obviously big but not as curvy as other body shapes
Thank goodness for body mold’s and spreaders

This is the set I’m thinking of getting when money comes in if it’s still available

https://guitartimbers.com/wp-content/up ... 0.jpg.webp

Robdon
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by Robdon » Mon May 06, 2024 9:59 am

Hi, Australian cedar can vary from reasonably hard to almost powdery soft. The older stuff in furniture tends to be pretty hard. If you can put a dent in it without too much pressure with your fingernail, I would be wary.

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56nortondomy
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Re: Australian cedar for soundboard?

Post by 56nortondomy » Mon May 06, 2024 4:33 pm

I've used it for tops a few times and it's great. As mentioned it's pretty soft, I wouldn't use it for back and sides there's much better options out there. Wayne

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