It's the wood that makes all the difference

Jacking in an IT job in order to create bespoke string instruments, Jim Fleeting has reinvented himself as a guitar guru
Sol16 July 2015

“You need wood of the right stiffness,” says master luthier (a maker of stringed instruments) Jim Fleeting, about choosing a guitar.

“I usually make my necks from mahogany, because that is traditional, but Fender decided that maple would be better from an engineering perspective as it’s stiffer and more hardwearing,” explains Jim.

“More stiffness means more sustain (how long a string can be heard) which means less attack (the peak response when the string is plucked). The energy at the tail end of the note has to come from somewhere, and it comes from the start of the note.”

How does that help when choosing a guitar? “A lot of sustain will suit a classical guitarist, so that could be from a heavier wood such as rosewood. A flamenco guitar wants all attack, so they are made from nice, light Spanish cedar. “Stiff necks, such as maple, mean more energy goes to the top so there is no effect on tone. Because we’re used to mahogany guitars, it’s an effect in itself.” Jim has made guitars out of ebony, walnut, redwood, olivewood and even Bolivian rosewood. So which is best? “The stiffer the neck, the better I reckon,” says Jim, who jacked in his IT job in London to go to Arizona to pursue his passion and learn his craft.

“I’m making a guitar from sequoia as my wife and I went to the Sequoia National Park on honeymoon. Materials define a guitar’s voice. It’s not all about sound – it’s about aesthetics too.”

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