Author |
Topic: cone height |
John Morton
From: Washington, USA
|
Posted 11 Apr 2018 12:35 pm
|
|
I have made cones for tricone lap guitars, 10+ for my own instruments and a few as replacements for Nationals with defunct cones. Having nothing to measure, I guessed to come up with reasonable specs. I think I just used the same slope as a 9 1/2" cone, which gave me .75" tall for a 6" cone.
Recently I sent out a set to replace originals in a pre-1930 squareneck, and heard back that they are noticeably shorter than the old ones. A player near me with a similar instrument sent for new National cones, and the strings barely cleared the hand rest - so those are probably taller than the old ones.
I would love to get some data points to help get these right. I would gladly make spinning forms for different cone heights as needed, but players mostly seem unable to make the measurement. Sticking a ruler in the vicinity doesn't cut it!
thanks |
|
|
|
Brad Bechtel
From: San Francisco, CA
|
Posted 11 Apr 2018 2:00 pm
|
|
Try contacting Mike Replogle (mikereplogle at gmail dot com) to get more information from him. You might also try contacting National Resophonic Guitars in San Luis Obispo. _________________ Brad’s Page of Steel
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars |
|
|
|
Jim Sliff
From: Lawndale California, USA
|
Posted 14 Apr 2018 10:51 am
|
|
If you use Google I believe there are some blueprints with dimensions floating around. _________________ No chops, but great tone
1930's/40's Rickenbacher/Rickenbacker 6&8 string lap steels
1921 Weissenborn Style 2; Hilo&Schireson hollownecks
Appalachian, Regal & Dobro squarenecks
1959 Fender 400 9+2 B6;1960's Fender 800 3+3+2; 1948 Fender Dual-8 Professional |
|
|
|