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  • Cabinet wood

    Hello,

    I am planning to build a combo cabinet for my 5E3 using Scott's excellent blueprints, which I found on this forum.

    I would really like to use a pretty wood, like curly hard maple, and stain/varnish it. Poplar is my second choice, even though it's not as visually appealing. I would prefer not to use pine because it's so soft, even though I know it was used in the original Fenders.

    For those of you who've done this - made a non-tweed covered cabinet - I have several questions:

    What wood did you use, and are you happy with its looks, workability, durability, and tone?

    Where did you buy it? (I can't seem to find any 10" wide hard maple where I live - poplar is easier). Is there a good online source?

    How did you stain/varnish it?

    If you were to do it over again, what would you do differently?

    Thank you very much for your time.

    -Lowell

  • #2
    Lowell, I've build a lot of 5e3 cabs off of scotts drawings. They are very well done and accuret. Just make sure you use a 1/2" roundover on the edges, thats the only error in the drawing.

    You should be able to find the wood at any lumber yard that stocks hardwoods. You will need to glue up two pieces to get 10" boards. Just work slow and clean. Remember that any blowout or errors will show if you don't cover the cab.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by matchless View Post
      Hello,

      I am planning to build a combo cabinet for my 5E3 using Scott's excellent blueprints, which I found on this forum.

      I would really like to use a pretty wood, like curly hard maple, and stain/varnish it. Poplar is my second choice, even though it's not as visually appealing. I would prefer not to use pine because it's so soft, even though I know it was used in the original Fenders.

      For those of you who've done this - made a non-tweed covered cabinet - I have several questions:

      What wood did you use, and are you happy with its looks, workability, durability, and tone?

      Where did you buy it? (I can't seem to find any 10" wide hard maple where I live - poplar is easier). Is there a good online source?

      How did you stain/varnish it?

      If you were to do it over again, what would you do differently?

      Thank you very much for your time.

      -Lowell

      I've built 5E3 cabinets out of cherry,maple,walnut,and cherry. All of them worked out fine. Cherry is probably my favorite. It's fairly light, but durable and it looks great. Mahogany is a little soft, but readily available in 10" and wider(as is cherry). My main amp is in a mahogany cabinet that has held up well and still looks good after 5 or 6 years. I prefer hardwood cabinets myself. A 5E3 cabinet is not real big, so no matter what you use weight shouldn't be an issue unless you use a real dense exotic hardwood. I'm a cabinetmaker so they're all available to me. Look around you area for small cabinet and furniture shops that might sell you enough out of stock or could order you some with their next delivery.Dave

      Comment


      • #4
        Thank you for the replies; I'm very grateful. That's a great tip about checking with cabinet/furniture shops. I'll give it a try.

        Daveg - could you discern any tonal differences between the woods you've used? I would imagine that it wouldn't make much difference in a closed back cab - but I'm still curious. I will definitely look into cherry.

        Thanks again.

        -Lowell

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by matchless View Post
          Thank you for the replies; I'm very grateful. That's a great tip about checking with cabinet/furniture shops. I'll give it a try.

          Daveg - could you discern any tonal differences between the woods you've used? I would imagine that it wouldn't make much difference in a closed back cab - but I'm still curious. I will definitely look into cherry.

          Thanks again.

          -Lowell

          None that I can definately attribute to the cabinet. The amps I have in them are all slightly different,(tubes,transformers,passive components) and they all have different speakers as well.

          Here's a cherry one





          Minwax makes a wipe on poly that works real well and is almost foolproof.

          Comment


          • #6
            Oh well, the picture didn't show up. Try this:
            http://www.freewebs.com/daveg207/davegphotopost.htm

            There's a picture of a cherry one at the bottom.

            Comment


            • #7
              I used solid furniture grade cherry once.
              Stained it with medium walnut Watco, followed by a couple lacquer sealer coats and a few satin finish lacquer coats.
              It looked fantastic but it didn't sound as good as the cheap, uncovered pine cabinet sitting right next to it
              Bruce

              Mission Amps
              Denver, CO. 80022
              www.missionamps.com
              303-955-2412

              Comment


              • #8
                So I guess we're wasting our time building nice hardwood cabinets for our amps. Or covering our cheap pine cabinets with tweed or tolex for that matter.
                I like pine cabinets as well. They look nice, and they sound great, but it's hard not to ding them up if you're even just throwing it into you back seat to go jam at a buddy's house.

                Comment


                • #9
                  There's a variety of pine known as Southern Yellow Pine that is somewhat harder . It's used to do floors. I am unsure where someone would be able to get it though. Local home improvement superstores don't carry it, but lumberyards might. I like cherry and poplar too, as others have mentioned, mainly for their strength and appearance. Plus the fact that they don't warp as easily as pine does. I do my woodworking in a basement, and store the planks there as well. It's difficult to keep it dry enough down there, so I have to resort to using up valuable floor space keeping the boards flat, with weight on them to stop the warpage. Most of the time I only purchase enough to build what I need.
                  Sometimes I'm good, then I'm bad..
                  http://www.evacuatedelectronics.com

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    You can probably get the southern yellow pine locally in the form of 1" thick stair treads. You'd likely pay dearly for them though and they'd probably be several narrow pieces glued up.
                    So, "sportsta4ever" It's about that time of year. Put the amps on the shelf and pull out my old Bonneville.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Matchless, have you thought about curly ash?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Daveg View Post
                        You can probably get the southern yellow pine locally in the form of 1" thick stair treads. You'd likely pay dearly for them though and they'd probably be several narrow pieces glued up.
                        So, "sportsta4ever" It's about that time of year. Put the amps on the shelf and pull out my old Bonneville.
                        You'd wind up with a parquet amp.. Could be an interesting look though.? Those stair treads are about $12-15 ea. around here. nah....
                        An old Bonny eh? excellent! I'm gonna try to find a way to ride and build amps. (not at the same time)
                        I rode to work this a.m. and it was cold. When i got to work it was a balmy 42 degress. The wind chill at 65mph is 9 deg. I have an hour ride to work. My right thumb wasn't happy at all.
                        Sometimes I'm good, then I'm bad..
                        http://www.evacuatedelectronics.com

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Satamax - no, I've never heard of it. A friend of mine has a strat with an ash body - it's very nice. If memory serves me correct, it's quite heavy with a lot of high end sparkle. Have you any experience with it?

                          I know that pine will sound the best, but I would prefer something a bit more durable. I will be constructing the cab with my 82 year old grandfather (a master woodworker and retired engineer), and I want it to last a long time because I know he won't be around much longer. The cab will be something to remember him by, along with the time we spent building it.

                          That said, I'm not completely opposed to pine because I am a bit of a tone junky!

                          Has anyone used poplar? If so, what is you opinion of the finished product?

                          Thanks very much for all the informative replies.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I think the biggest problem with poplar is that it's not real attractive. I make a lot of millwork and casework out of it when it's being painted. It's stable, it machines well, and you can get it in wide stock. I make speaker/amp cabinets out of it sometimes when it's getting tolexed. It's cheap too. It just doesn't look good with a natural finish.Dave

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Here's a poplar cabinet finished with amber shellac. First couple of coats were done with clear to seal it up, then the amber to hide the green tint of the wood.
                              Attached Files
                              Sometimes I'm good, then I'm bad..
                              http://www.evacuatedelectronics.com

                              Comment

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