Vacuum formed guitar backs

5691491
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Inventors

DeGomez, David

Application #

600536

Filed

Feb-13-1996

Published

Nov-25-1997

Current US Class

084/267
084/291
425/388
425/438

International Classes

G01D 003/00

Field of Search

84/291 84/267 84/293 425/388 425/438 425/DIG.

Examiners

Gellner; Michael L.

US Patent References

4090427   Stringed musical i...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A back shell for guitars or similar musical instruments having sides that at the rim turn inward and then outward to produce a flange that the soundboard can be adhered to. With multi-part tooling, the back shell can be produced at a very low cost from sheet plastics using the vacuum form method of manufacture.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A back shell for a stringed musical instrument comprising:

A back portion;

a plurality of sidewall portions extending transverse to the back portion so that the back portion and sidewall portions form a U-shaped cross section having an interior between opposing sidewall portions; and

a lip structure for attaching a soundboard, the lip structure extending transverse to said plurality of sidewall portions and outwardly away from said interior.

2. The back shell of claim 1, wherein said sidewall portions include an angled portion adjacent to the lip structure and extending toward said interior.

3. The back shell of claim 2, wherein said lip structure extends away from said interior less than an outermost part of the sidewall portions.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The history of manufacturing acoustic guitars with plastics is a long and checkered one. The advantages of using plastics in string instrument construction must seem obvious. Traditional wooden guitars are made from numerous different parts, many parts hand crafted by skilled artisans. The wood itself must be carefully selected and once the instrument is finished the wood can become unstable when the temperature or humidity changes. Plastics on the other hand can be quickly and economically cast in complex shapes that remain stable under a wide variety of conditions.

Beginning in the early fifties thousands of children learned the basics of playing fretted instruments on injection molded Maccaferri ukeleles (U.S. Pat. No. 2,597,154). But while these little instruments were more than adequate to the task of initiating budding musicians, Maccaferri's full sized, injection molded guitars didn't catch on with serious performers. Today the only successful use of plastics in acoustic guitar manufacturing is the Ovation guitar made by the Kaman Co (U.S. Pat. No. 4,090,427). The Ovation uses a carbon fiber, (originally fiberglass and polyester) bowl shaped back, joined to a more traditional wood top.
 
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