Originally posted by toejam
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Ordering Custom Kelly
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Originally posted by wilkinsi View Postbalsawood"Dear Dr. Bill,
I work with a woman who is about 5 feet tall and weighs close to 450 pounds and has more facial hair than ZZ Top." - Jack The Riffer
"OK, we can both have Ben..joint custody. I'll have him on the weekends. We could go out in my Cobra and give people the finger..weather permitting of course.." -Bill Z. Bub
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Weight
I've read somewhere (don't remember where right now) that poplar is lighter than alder. I had a catalogue where they had written the weight of each type of wood for a given size. Poplar was the lightest they had available.'08 Jackson Custom Shop Soloist
'09 Jackson Custom Shop Soloist
'09 Fender Stratocaster American Deluxe Fatstrat
'12 Charvel ProMod SoCal Japan
'17 Gibson Les Paul Classic
'13 Gibson M-III
Taylor 214CE
Dean 6-string Bass
Morgan Ukulele
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Wood varies greatly in density from piece to piece and tree to tree. I've had ash guitars that weigh a ton, and mahogany and solid maple guitars that were pretty lightweight. Some people just don't get this. Some stupid twat tried to ridicule me once because I said that not all mahogany guitars were heavy. In the end, he's the one that looked stupid.
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Originally posted by pebber View PostPoplar is indeed lighter then Alder, let's say average 450 kg/m3 for Poplar and 550 kg/m3 for Alder. Redwood and Spruce are in the same region as Poplar when it comes to kg/m3
All that I can tell you is that every 1990 -1995 Pro Jackson that is Poplar (that I have felt) is heavy. Very heavy.
and Every soloist (USA soloist) that was pre 1999 (poplar) was very heavy indeed.
Most of the jackson alder guitars that I have picked up are light.
But every guitar feels different, and I'm sure that heavy alder or Poplar or Mah could be found.
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Originally posted by zeegler View PostWood varies greatly in density from piece to piece and tree to tree. I've had ash guitars that weigh a ton, and mahogany and solid maple guitars that were pretty lightweight. Some people just don't get this. Some stupid twat tried to ridicule me once because I said that not all mahogany guitars were heavy. In the end, he's the one that looked stupid.
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Originally posted by zeegler View PostWood varies greatly in density from piece to piece and tree to tree. I've had ash guitars that weigh a ton, and mahogany and solid maple guitars that were pretty lightweight. Some people just don't get this. Some stupid twat tried to ridicule me once because I said that not all mahogany guitars were heavy. In the end, he's the one that looked stupid.
poplar alder very similar alot of companys dont like poplar because it can be an odd shade of green sometimes even purple sometimes streaked with this coloration which can be a problem when finishing bursts or trans colors.
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Originally posted by j2379 View Post+1000
poplar alder very similar alot of companys dont like poplar because it can be an odd shade of green sometimes even purple sometimes streaked with this coloration which can be a problem when finishing bursts or trans colors.
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