Wood Quality
Posted: Sat Apr 28, 2012 4:57 am
Hello,
I am gearing up to build my first electric guitar, have read up tons and am still doing re search before I go off buying materials. Now I know that when it comes to woods like Spruce and Cedar there can be a world of difference in quality from tree to tree. My family owns a few cedar mills, and some blocks we buy and cut into shingles for $300 a cord, where other's come in, get dubbed music wood, and get sold for $300 a block. When it comes to Alder though, what is the difference between the 100 dollar blanks from stewmac and the straight vertical grained 2x10 bieng sold for $20 at my local lumber yard? Does the wood have more grains per inch? I know here's no figure on a piece of Alder worth 80 bucks. Is it just way marked up from how many hands it's touched? I'm on the Western Olympic Peninsula in Washington (aka Alder Heaven) so if that's just the wood I see here bieng shipped to Pennsylvania and sold to me marked up I don't want to be the sucker that buys it.
Any thoughts?
I am gearing up to build my first electric guitar, have read up tons and am still doing re search before I go off buying materials. Now I know that when it comes to woods like Spruce and Cedar there can be a world of difference in quality from tree to tree. My family owns a few cedar mills, and some blocks we buy and cut into shingles for $300 a cord, where other's come in, get dubbed music wood, and get sold for $300 a block. When it comes to Alder though, what is the difference between the 100 dollar blanks from stewmac and the straight vertical grained 2x10 bieng sold for $20 at my local lumber yard? Does the wood have more grains per inch? I know here's no figure on a piece of Alder worth 80 bucks. Is it just way marked up from how many hands it's touched? I'm on the Western Olympic Peninsula in Washington (aka Alder Heaven) so if that's just the wood I see here bieng shipped to Pennsylvania and sold to me marked up I don't want to be the sucker that buys it.
Any thoughts?