Ricardo -> RE: Can you correct a too soft pulsacion? (Dec. 28 2022 10:14:38)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Echi Not only in Spain really. I don't understand why in USA the concept (which in many places is considered as something obvious) is so controversial. When you order a flamenco guitar to a maker in Spain they'll ask you if you have any preference in terms of "pulsacion" of the guitar ... anyway. Obviously you can survive also without questioning what is this and that's ok. It is not controversial. It is “action” in USA, as demonstrated by Amalia Ramirez. Always was, in Spain apparently. She measures the “pulsation” at the 12 fret in millimeters, and adjusts the bone saddle to change the pulsation, sticking to “standard pulsation” in general. The controversy came from Anders, a Scandinavian living in Spain, who said explicitly that pulsation is NOT ACTION, and so many agreed with him, and guys like me left scratching our heads WTF? For a long time. I tried hard long ago to believe him, or understand him at least, and not being a builder assumed it was a “thing”. Over time I realized that people sometimes believe in a universal setup, so the concept of “low bridge” is the same as “low action”, and this is not the case. So now, we have the story above how the bracing was changed when the back came off (I thought the back locks in the neck angle when it gets glued?), several times, and the words “soft and hard” as in the way we use the word “action” after all, came back into play confusing the issue. So we have to believe that the action was not affected by the back coming off and back on, and that only the bracing made a guitar hard to play? Like estebanana its time for a fork in my head. [:D]
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