Guitar with dual sound chambers

4903567
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Inventors

Justus, Wilbur J.

Application #

312495

Filed

Feb-21-1989

Published

Feb-27-1990

Current US Class

084/291
084/294

International Classes

G10D 003/02

Field of Search

84/268 84/270-271 84/275-277 84/284-285 84/291-292 84/294-296

Examiners

Franklin; Lawrence R.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Rickert; Roger M.

US Patent References

4090427   Stringed musical i...
4161130   Body for bass guitar
4206678   Introduced in the m...

Referenced by:

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Citation

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Abstract
A guitar is formed with a one-piece molded fiberglass body having nested oppositely facing inner and outer concavities. A sound board is bonded to one side of the body to enclose the outer concavity and a substantially smaller back is bonded to the other side of the body to enclose the smaller concavity. The inner concavity has a peripheral rim which is recessed to receive the back allowing the back and exterior of the body to be uniformly coated to give the appearance of blending together as a single piece. An optional sound transmitting post may extend between the back and a central portion of the inner concavity. The inner concavity is provided with small openings or f-holes for sound communication between the concavities and the sound board has the conventional central opening.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A guitar or similar plucked string instrument having a body portion with at least two distinct sound chambers and comprising a contour molded one piece fiberglass member having nested oppositely opening concavities each terminating in first and second spaced apart generally planar rims for receiving a relatively flat sound board and a relatively flat back respectively, a relatively flat sound board having a centrally located air passing opening and a periphery mateable with the first rim, and a relatively flat opening-free back having a periphery mateable with the second rim.

2. The instrument of claim 1 wherein the sound board and back are made of wood with the sound board periphery being substantially longer than the periphery of the back.



Description
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to the construction of musical instruments and more particularly to the construction of a plucked string musical instrument such as a guitar having multiple sound cavities.

Traditionally, stringed musical instruments such as guitars, violins, cellos and the like have been fabricated by hand almost entirely from wood by highly skilled craftsmen. With increasing labor costs, such hand made instruments are too expensive for the average amateur or casual student musician. The time honored technique is to form a wooden sidewall into a somewhat serpentine pear-shape which is subsequently held in that pear-shape by cross struts. A front sound board and a back of similar size and shape are fastened to the formed side. Forming of the side portion is time consuming and expensive, and, if not properly formed and subsequently braced, the side may ultimately warp severely damaging or ruining the instrument. Several attempts have been made to automate production of these instruments including attempts to fabricate the main body of the instrument by molding or similar techniques. For example, in U.S. Pat. No. 3,656,395 the body of a guitar was formed of a one-piece curved bowl of fiberglass material forming the back and sides of the body and a flat wooden soundboard adhered to the fiberglass to form the top of the body. U.S. Pat. No. 4,161,130 suggests a bowl shaped body formed in a single piece of graphite, fiberglass or impregnated fabric with a transverse waist separating a smaller upper bowl portion from a larger lower bowl portion. Similar attempts have been made in the world of electronic stringed instruments such as an electronic guitar. In U.S. Pat. No. 4,359,923, the entire body, neck, head and tail piece are formed as a single metal casting. Of course, the design considerations in electronic stringed instruments are quite different from those in the traditional stringed instrument. None of these attempts have yielded a particularly desirable sound, nor have they met with much commercial success.
 
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