Stringed musical instrument

5537906
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Inventors

Steinberger, Richard N.

Application #

350811

Filed

Dec-8-1994

Published

Jul-23-1996

Current US Class

084/291
084/293

International Classes

G10D 003/00

Field of Search

84/267 84/275 84/291 84/292 84/293

Examiners

Stanzione; Patrick J.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Epstein; Saul

US Patent References

5337643   Guitar neck appar...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
An electric stringed musical instrument of the lute family, and in particular, a double bass, wherein the body, neck, and headstock are cut out of a single laminated section of a cone. The front surface of the headstock is coplanar with the neck and body, and the back surface is substantially concentric with the front surface. The strings are anchored in a central cutout in the headstock. Also disclosed is a neck-straightening truss rod capable of exerting either compressive or tensile forces on the neck, a pair of sensors sensitive to string vibrations coupled the bridge which are summed and differenced to provide signals useful in connection with plucked and bowed strings respectively, and a twist resisting support to make a slim double bass practical.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A stringed musical instrument which comprises:

a body having a face surface which is substantially conical, and a back surface substantially concentric with its face surface;

a neck having a face surface which is substantially conical, and a back surface substantially concentric with its face surface; and

a headstock having a face surface which is substantially conical, and a back surface substantially concentric with its face surface;

said body, neck, and headstock being portions of a single piece which has a face surface which is substantially conical, and a back surface which is substantially concentric with its face surface;

a plurality of strings stretched between said headstock and said body;



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention is related to stringed musical instruments of the lute family, and more specifically to electrified versions of such instruments. The invention is particularly adaptable to violins, including the contrabass (also called the double bass or upright bass).

A traditional lute family instrument includes an enclosed resonant sound chamber, or body, and a neck, with strings stretched along the neck and over at least a portion of the body. The instruments are played by bowing, strumming, or plucking the strings while clamping them (with the player's fingers) at various points along the neck in order to change the pitches of the resulting tones.

In most cases, the body has no real acoustic function in modern day electrified versions of these instruments, since most, if not all, of the desired sound characteristics can be, and usually are, supplied by the electronic circuitry. However, the structural shapes of the bodies have generally been carried along into electrified versions of the instruments to provide a familiar reference for the player. In the case of the electrified double bass (prior to the present invention), a large body still served a function, i.e., that of preventing the instrument from spinning on its axis when being played. Up until the present invention, a double bass player usually was required to hold the instrument against his or her body to resist the twisting tendency.
 
  A light weight guitar construction and associated method of manufacture involves the use of a light weight wood core material having deposited thereover...  A stringed musical instrument such as an acoustic guitar, a mandolin, a ukulele and a violin has a body and a neck protruding away from the body. The body...