Wood plays an integral role in every musical instrument be it in its design, construction as well as to their behaviour. The importance of wood in stringed instruments is well acknowledged for soundboards that transmit and radiate a string's vibration and function as a filter to alter the timbre. Different types of wood have different types of textures. These textures and differences are not just to feel but also for the tones that are produced from the instruments.
The fingerboards
A stringed instrument is a combination of different parts like the body, neck, fingerboard to name a few.
Fingerboard or fretboard is a major part in a stringed instrument, whether it be for a fretless instrument like violin, viola, cello or fretted instruments like guitar , sitar, ukulele. It acts as the neck on an instrument's body through which the hands of an artist run making melodies.
Guitar frets are strips of metal made from a nickel and brass alloy, embedded on the fingerboards by skilled guitar luthiers.Musical notes are produced after pressing on each of the frets against the fretboard below a fret.
Why does the wood affect the tone?
The vibrating motion of the string against the metal frets produces different musical notes. The species of guitar woods used for the neck plays a significant role in tone production: denser neck woods create brighter sounds but with less sustain, as they tend to reflect sound waves, while less dense woods absorb them, offering a richer sustain.
Some of the best woods for the best sounding for your guitar
Ebony
Ebony has a long history of use, with carved items discovered in tombs from the Old Kingdom of Egypt. Sourced from several species of Diospyros, ebony is dense enough to sink in water. With its fine texture, it serves as an ornamental wood and a popular tonewood in musical instruments.
The most dense and durable wood used for fingerboards, ebony gives the sound more snap and clarity. Ebony has an open tone, bright attack, great sustain and excellent durability. Even when unfinished, it is slick and smooth, giving it a rapid playing feel and excellent responsiveness.
Brazilian Ebony Fingerboard wood
Brazilian ebony is one of the work friendly all around woods which is stable and straight grained.
Mexican royal ebony/ Katalox is a dark purple/black colour accent with the creamy/golden sapwood to create contrast that can be well utilised for a unique look. It is exceptionally heavy and hard. Very dense exotic wood yet finishes well.
Maple Fretboard
Wood, consisting of a smooth grain pattern, high durability, maple wood is a greatly strong hardwood. Belonging to the genus Acer, there are over 100 species of maple trees.
Hard maple, Ambrosia maple, and Birdseye maple are the much used species while in the manufacture of a guitar fingerboard. Popular for maple's sharp attack and biting response, its characteristics yield sustain and bright tone. With tight pores and little natural oil, the playability of maple is quick and slick.
Hard Maple
Ambrosia Maple
Birdseye Maple
Many guitars have one-piece fretted maple necks as one-piece necks transfer string vibration differently than those with a separate fingerboard.
Rosewood
From the genus of Dalbergia, they are strong as well as heavy. With excellent stability and high density, it plays a major role in the making of guitar wood fingerboards.
Since rosewood is a natural oil wood, the stray overtones are absorbed into the oily pores which produces the sound richer.
Rosewood, being known for having different hues, is a very hard and dense wood with great clarity and articulation in tone.
East Indian Rosewood
The east indian rosewood, scientifically known as Dalbergia Latifolia, one prominent species among the rosewood, is described as soft under the fingers, warmer sounding with less defined attack.
We gives you the best wood for your best guitar. To know more about Exotic zone wood