Isolated guitar body

4169402
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Inventors

Wood, Neil L.

Application #

823105

Filed

Feb-6-1978

Published

Oct-2-1979

Current US Class

084/291
084/293
084/299
084/307
084/314R
984/106
984/112
984/DIG1

International Classes

G10D 001/08; G10D 003/12

Field of Search

84/267 84/278 84/280 84/281 84/290 84/291 84/293 84/298 84/299 84/307 84/314

Examiners

Franklin; Lawrence R.

US Patent References

4037815   Musical instrument...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A frame in which the body of a string instrument is supported, the frame having a main bar extending longitudinally in spaced relation to the back of the instrument body. The frame extends with end-pieces adapting to the ends of the said body, such end-pieces having clips applicable to the said ends by way of semi-hard inserts to dispose the body floatingly. One end-piece also extends with the neck and fret or string board of the instrument, while the other end-piece returns with a tail piece receiving the inner ends of the strings and formed as a bridge. The main bar is longitudinally adjustable for different lengths of instrument bodies.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A stringed musical instrument, comprising:

a body comprising a top soundboard, a bottom soundboard, and side member means connecting said soundboards to form a resonant chamber within said body, said soundboards having no supporting braces connected thereto;

a frame mounted externally of said body for floatingly supporting said body, said frame comprising a neck, a tailpiece, and bar means rigidly connecting said neck and tailpiece; means contacting said body substantially along the edges of said soundboards for floatingly supporting said body above said bar means; and strings connected to said neck and tailpiece, the tension of said strings being resisted solely by said frame.



Description
My invention relates to string instruments, and more particularly to guitars. As guitars are constructed, the body is the sound chamber; and its vibrations reflect and amplify the sounds produced by the strings. It is therefore desirable that the vibrations be created in as many areas of the body as possible in order to obtain the best volume and richest sound from the instrument. However, I have found that the sound board of the instrument body, made solid by inner bracing, loses vibrations over a considerable area for that reason, and therefore transmits less sound to the tone chamber. As generally constructed the bridge is where the vibrations of the strings are absorbed and transmitted to the sound board of the guitar body. The bridge is usually a flat bar attached to the sound board of the guitar body and formed with receptacles for the inner ends of the strings. Obviously, the inner bracing stiffens the sound board over a substantial area, excluding vibrations from the same. Also, securing the inner ends of the strings in an area where the instrument sound board is not rigid but yieldable to vibrations imposes a strong pull and a strain on such sound board in a direction crosswise of the flow of vibrations from the strings toward the sound chamber, tending to deflect and dissipate such vibrations.
 
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