Field of the Invention
Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to a flat top guitar. More particularly, the invention relates to an improved bracing structure for a guitar top.
Description of the Related Art
The bodies of instruments such as flat top guitars commonly utilize a round or oval shaped sound hole in the guitar top, beneath the strings, in front of the bridge, or point of attachment for the strings. This opening creates a structurally weak spot allowing string tension to create physical distortions in the body of the guitar, potentially rendering the guitar non-functional. Structural members, such as braces, are required to counteract this deformation. As well as counteracting deformation from string tension, the structural members are required to conduct and distribute vibration from the strings to assist in even vibration of the resonant chamber, or body, of the guitar.
Instruments with strings attached to the center of the vibrating diaphragm in the manner of conventional flat top guitars, are inefficient amplifiers of string energy. Much of the inertia imparted by the musician into the vibrating string is dissipated and lost through the supporting members of an instrument, rather than being amplified by the body of the instrument. This lost energy reduces the potential volume, sustain, and responsiveness in a string instrument.
The action of vibrating strings is governed largely by the structure the strings are anchored to and tensioned across. The more rigid the structure is made, the more the structure is resistant to vibrating. A structure resistant to vibrating will absorb little of the string's energy allowing the string to continue vibrating for an extended length of time. This characteristic of a rigid supporting structure and corresponding longer sustaining string vibration is manifested in a long sustaining musical tone of the instrument; this quality is a benefit to the musician performing on such an instrument.
The disadvantage of a rigid supporting structure is the imparted limitation on vibration directly impacts the ability of the structure to resonate and convert the vibration of the strings into audible volume. Volume is measured in amplitude of vibration. Great volume is necessary for a musical instrument to amplify the vibration of the strings. The more flexible the supporting structure of the instrument is, the higher the amplitude or potential volume of the produced musical tones.
There exists between the two considerations of the structure supporting the strings a direct opposition. Namely, opposition between the rigidity needed for long sustaining vibration and flexibility needed to produce audible volume in the form of vibrational amplitude. Conventionally, instruments are constructed in a manner which attempts to balance rigidity and flexibility to result in a musical instrument possessing both sustain and volume.
Typical guitars and similar instruments often employ a series of structural supports on the underside of the top or face of the instrument, commonly with two main supporting braces arrayed in an intersecting arrangement resembling the letter X. The X is oriented with the intersection of the braces centrally located on the underside of the face of the instrument, typically in front of the attachment point of the strings. These instruments will commonly utilize additional asymmetrical bracing in the area near and behind the attachment point of the strings to further stabilize the top of the instrument to prevent distortion from the tension imparted by the strings. This method is a compromise between the rigidity of the instrument's top and its flexibility and ability to vibrate. Another method of support commonly utilized in guitars possessing low tension nylon or gut strings utilizes multiple supporting bars with their origin near the sound hole of the instrument, parallel to the strings, or spayed out into the wider portions of the guitar's body.
The present invention generally relates to a guitar top. In one embodiment, the guitar top includes a sound hole, a neck end that is configured for attachment to a guitar neck with a longitudinal axis, a heel end, a transverse axis normal to the longitudinal axis, and a bottom surface. The bottom surface of the guitar top includes a pair of longitudinal braces that are attached to the surface. The pair of longitudinal braces extend primarily along the longitudinal axis from the heel end toward the neck end and terminate at a point beyond the sound hole toward the neck end. Each of the longitudinal braces is positioned on an opposing side of the sound hole such that a distance between the longitudinal braces exceeds the diameter of the sound hole. The longitudinal braces are oriented such that the distance between the pair of longitudinal braces is greater toward the neck end than the heel end. One or more fan braces extend primarily along the transverse axis, and at least one of the one or more fan braces terminate at one of the pair of longitudinal braces.
So that the manner in which the above recited features of the present invention can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the invention, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to embodiments, some of which are illustrated in the appended drawings. It is to be noted, however, that the appended drawings illustrate only typical embodiments of this invention and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
The present invention relates to structural support members for the top of a stringed musical instrument, such as a flat top guitar. More particularly, the invention relates to a novel arrangement of structural support members, or braces that maximizes both the structural integrity and rigidity of the guitar and improves the ability of the instrument to amplify energy produced by the strings.
In the embodiments shown in
The guitar top 1 may have strings strung from a bridge to a headstock of the guitar. The strings may be composed of either nylon or steel. The tension applied by the strings to the guitar top 1 can distort the guitar, rendering it unusable. The longitudinal braces 2a, 2b attached to the guitar top 1 resist deformation by increasing the rigidity of the top 1 along the longitudinal axis 11. The longitudinal braces 2a, 2b may be fashioned in one of multiple ways that would alter either the rigidity of the braces or the ability of the braces to assist in the resistance of the guitar top 1 to deformation. The longitudinal braces 2a, 2b may be composed of a single material or a composite of two or more materials, such that the mechanical properties can be tailored to a specific embodiment of the invention. A preferred material may be wood. A thickness of the longitudinal braces 2a, 2b may be altered in order to vary the brace rigidity. The precise arrangement of the longitudinal braces 2a, 2b on the guitar top 1 may be altered, by increasing or decreasing the angle between the longitudinal axis 11 and each longitudinal brace 2a, 2b in order to increase or decrease the support provided by the longitudinal braces 2a, 2b along the longitudinal axis 11. The ability to make such modifications allows for precise control of the rigidity of the guitar top 1.
The one or more fan braces, 4a, 4b, 4c may be affixed to the bottom surface of the guitar top 1 in order to direct and distribute the vibration from the strings toward a center of a vibrating area or hemisphere 12, 13 of the guitar top 1. The hemispheres 12, 13 are permitted to vibrate and produce the necessary vibratory amplitude, generating audible volume. Modifying the fan braces 4a, 4b, 4c allows for control over the flexibility of the guitar top 1, and thus the audible volume produced by the guitar. The precise number and positions of the fan braces 4a, 4b, 4c could be varied depending on the specific embodiment of the invention.
In one embodiment, fan braces 4a, 4b, 4c may comprise pairs that share an axis of symmetry corresponding to the longitudinal axis 11 of the guitar top 1. In
As shown in the embodiment of
The fan braces 4a, 4b, 4c may be positioned on the guitar top 1 relative to the sound hole 3 and the bridge plate 7. The one or more fan braces 4a may abut the longitudinal braces 2a, 2b proximate the bridge plate 7 toward the heel end 6 of the top 1. In this manner, fan braces 4a, 4b are positioned between the bridge plate 7 and the heel end 6. As seen in the embodiments shown in
The one or more fan braces 4c may abut longitudinal braces 2a, 2b between the bridge plate 7 and the neck end 5. As seen in the embodiment shown in
Fan braces 4c may be positioned proximate the sound hole 3 toward the heel end 6. In the embodiments shown, the fan braces 4c are positioned near an edge of the sound hole 3 nearest the bridge plate 7. In other embodiments of the invention, the fan braces 4c could be positioned near other edges of the sound hole 3.
As seen in the embodiments shown in
The guitar top could be assembled with a guitar body and a guitar neck using any method known in the art. The guitar may contain additional components, such as electronics and other guitar components known in the art.
While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the present invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.
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Entry |
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Werner, Bradford—“This is Classical Guitar,” Webpage: http://www.thisisclassicalguitar.com/bracing-styles-for-classical-guitars/, 2015. |