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How Important is Fretboard Wood?


The Rover

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I have this SX Tele that I really love. Its got a big fat maple neck with a maple fingerboard and jumbo frets. I put in a vintage 3 saddle bridge and new pups/electronics. Its got a Texas Special in the bridge, a Fender era Gretsch filtertron in the neck and a 300k tone pot with a Greasebucket circuit. I also refinished it with Dakota red nitro paint. It seriously sounds great and not just for a cheap guitar. Only problem is I really prefer rosewood fretboards and I think a new rosewood neck would look a lot better with the Dakota red.  I must admit part of me just wants a Fender licensed headstock to make it look like a proper Tele. :catembarrassed:

So. .  I want to get a Warmoth Tele neck with the same general specs, big round neck, jumbo frets, 1 5/8" nut. . . only with an Indian rosewood board. Im just afraid it will alter the tone of this guitar too much and it wont sound the same. Will having a different fretboard wood, or for that matter a new neck,  alter the tone significantly? In other words, what makes this guitar sound so great?

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Its mostly your pickups and amp/effects.

I highly doubt anyone can hear the differences between different types of rosewood in the fretboard. Especially if you're using effectsor playing dirty.

Your choice should be made based on specs, price, availability, and looks.

Warmoth is good stuff, but keep in mind there are great deals to be had on eBay with people selling fender brand tele necks.

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I guess this will be a cool little experiment. The last Warmoth neck I got was a huge improvement over the old neck, but that was a Mighty Mite. I really like the feel of this neck so Im mostly concerned with replicating that, which is why I can't buy an "off the shelf" neck. There's very specific specs I need, like the narrower nut and jumbo frets. Also, Ive personally found any kind of Fender brand neck to be way overpriced on Ebay. I can get a new Warmoth neck with all my customizations for well under $200 minus tax/shipping. That would barely cover a MIM neck on Ebay. YMMV

And of course I save a lot of money by finishing it myself.

Warmoth charges a fortune to spray 'em.

Bottle of Tru Oil-$6, paper towels-$2. . .done.

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It does affect the sound to some extent but the set up even more, then how thick the neck is. There's also the aspect of how well certain wood hold the frets but all usual fretboard wood do a adequate job at that.

 

In your case, it seems you'd be happier with the new look and get some enthousiasm out of making it to different specs. It would make you play more... would make you better... and you know what they say, the tone is in the fingers...

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Jkater wrote:

 

In your case, it seems you'd be happier with the new look and get some enthousiasm out of making it to different specs. It would make you play more... would make you better... and you know what they say, the tone is in the fingers...

 

Yeah, and worst case scenario it makes the guitar sound weird and I put the old one back on, then use the Warmoth neck for another Tele project. I love Teles. :smileyhappy: Well see. . .

 

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Somebody here posted a sound clip a while back with a direct A/B comparison of the same strat with a maple and rosewood neck. 

It was a pretty noticable difference from what I remember.  I mean...not a fundamental difference or anything like that, but definitely different.

Actually here's a different one I found on youtube....

 

 

I don't know about you but I certainly can hear a difference.  I think the typical stereo types apply nicely on that demo....rosewood is more warm and "round" sounding with the maple having much more attack and that old well used word "snap".

So there you go.  If you think what your hearing there is too much of a potential difference then don't change it.  If not...do. 

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If you are only changing the neck for aesthetic reasons, don't, it will sound different.  However, Pau Ferro is the most similar to maple (from personal experience), in sound and looks a little the same albeit a bit lighter.  It's smooth and plays (feels) really good.

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Rosewood will sound warmer the maple. Woodier to, in part due to no finish like maple allways has. But it wont be a bog diff. Small, notceable when you listen. You could compensate tone wise somewhat for the most part by adjusting pups for little treblier voice. Or having tone control full open if you now use it partly rolled off.

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