Veneer under fingerboard?

Started by 8seoonekenobf, September 06, 2011, 12:20:05 PM

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Flatwoundbass

Hi all,
 
I have a '97 Epic 5 with what appears to be a veneer between the maple neck and the ebony fingerboard...It seems to be the same wood that is used on my headstock veneer, which is not walnut(?), which is what the body top is.  Is there a particular species of wood commonly used for this under the fingerboard/headstock application?  Attached is a headstock pic, but the strip under the fingerboard may prove difficult to get a good photo of...
Any opinions/information greatly appreciated!
 
-Steve

mica

The veneer was usually Walnut. On the original style of LED installation, there were two veneers, typically Maple and Walnut or Maple and Purpleheart.  
 
This was termed sacrificial veneer and it was intended to make future (and inevitable) repairs easier. We stopped doing it I think in about 1999 or 2000, as we improved techniques for removing fingerboards, and the clean look of the Ebony right to the edge of the neck was, well, cleaner! It also allows for the fingerboard to be thicker by the thickness of the veneer.

Flatwoundbass

Thanks, Mica!
 
Great to hear it straight from the source...does the headstock veneer look like walnut to you as well?

mica

Yes, that looks like Flame Walnut. It could also be Flame Koa, but it doesn't quite look like Koa to me.

Flatwoundbass

Thanks again for the mystery solving!...here's a final one...got a guess on the top wood?
 

tmoney61092


Flatwoundbass

Just plain walnut, or would this be considered burl or flame or ???

mica


Flatwoundbass

Thanks Mica for your expertise and helpfulness!

hifiguy

Now that was interesting!  I've always wondered why there seemed to be a paper thin maple veneer between the fretboard and neck of my '97 Stanley Sig Std. even though it doesn't have LEDs.