One day, while staring at pictures of a bunch of gorgeous guitars, it struck me how different they could be in the location of the bridge. In particular, I was struck by the variation in how close the bridge was to the waist of the guitar (the narrowest part of the body), as opposed to the centre of the rear half of the body (and please note we are dealing with the more conventional rounded bodies here, not the weird and wonderful).
In part, this is a function of where the neck joins the body, but it is also a function of deliberate changes to body shape. For example, the SG neck joins the body at the last fret. As a consequence of that neck/body joint and the scale of the neck, the bridge is situated very close to the waist of the body. This is in contrast to the Les Paul, which, through its use of a deeper cutaway, joins the neck top the body higher up and thus sets the bridge farther back from the waist; not quite AT the widest part of the body, but fairly close to it. In stark contrast, many of the Rickenbacker guitars, while they too join the neck to the body very high up (if not every bit as high up as the SG), use a compressed body style that situates the waist further forward than one might find on a Gibson, allowing the bridge to be situated even closer to the widest part of the body than on a Les Paul.
So, while the point where the neck meets the body can be a driver of the bridge location, relative to the waist (as illustrated by the SG), one can alter the body shape to effectively situate the bridge wherever you want.
Why should this make a difference? If you think of it, the width of the body, at the point where the bridge is installed, presents a critical mass which defines what frequencies will resonate more and less. We like to think of the SG as having a kind of alto voicing compared to the more tenor qualities of a Les Paul, and tend to attribute it to the different thickness of the body and lack of maple top, but there is also that big difference in how much mass is sitting adjacent to the bridge. You have to ask yourself "Just what is surrounding the bridge, and what is it damping?".
The ES-335 and its derivatives may all look the same, but they can be very different in this respect. I'm looking at a picture of a 335 and its Guild copycat cousin, the Starfire. Where the 335 joins the body at the 20th fret, the Starfire joins at the 17th and sets the bridge further back from the waist of the guitar than the 335 does. Naturally, the two sound a little different.
In general, Fenders tend to have the bridges set further back from the waist than Gibsons, and similar-styled instruments. I suspect that as a result of this, they actually sound warmer than one might expect, given the differential nature of the humbucking and single-coil pickups.
Now, all of this may be no great revelation for many here, but it was for me, and started me to thinking about whether there is any sort of algorithm to describe or predict the behaviour of a solid-body guitar, based on the location of the bridge, relative to the waist vs the "haunches" (widest point of the body). I'd always looked at the instrument from the aesthetic point of view, and ease of upper access point of view, rarely considering that the birdge was situated somewhere different as a result of those design choices.
In part, this is a function of where the neck joins the body, but it is also a function of deliberate changes to body shape. For example, the SG neck joins the body at the last fret. As a consequence of that neck/body joint and the scale of the neck, the bridge is situated very close to the waist of the body. This is in contrast to the Les Paul, which, through its use of a deeper cutaway, joins the neck top the body higher up and thus sets the bridge farther back from the waist; not quite AT the widest part of the body, but fairly close to it. In stark contrast, many of the Rickenbacker guitars, while they too join the neck to the body very high up (if not every bit as high up as the SG), use a compressed body style that situates the waist further forward than one might find on a Gibson, allowing the bridge to be situated even closer to the widest part of the body than on a Les Paul.
So, while the point where the neck meets the body can be a driver of the bridge location, relative to the waist (as illustrated by the SG), one can alter the body shape to effectively situate the bridge wherever you want.
Why should this make a difference? If you think of it, the width of the body, at the point where the bridge is installed, presents a critical mass which defines what frequencies will resonate more and less. We like to think of the SG as having a kind of alto voicing compared to the more tenor qualities of a Les Paul, and tend to attribute it to the different thickness of the body and lack of maple top, but there is also that big difference in how much mass is sitting adjacent to the bridge. You have to ask yourself "Just what is surrounding the bridge, and what is it damping?".
The ES-335 and its derivatives may all look the same, but they can be very different in this respect. I'm looking at a picture of a 335 and its Guild copycat cousin, the Starfire. Where the 335 joins the body at the 20th fret, the Starfire joins at the 17th and sets the bridge further back from the waist of the guitar than the 335 does. Naturally, the two sound a little different.
In general, Fenders tend to have the bridges set further back from the waist than Gibsons, and similar-styled instruments. I suspect that as a result of this, they actually sound warmer than one might expect, given the differential nature of the humbucking and single-coil pickups.
Now, all of this may be no great revelation for many here, but it was for me, and started me to thinking about whether there is any sort of algorithm to describe or predict the behaviour of a solid-body guitar, based on the location of the bridge, relative to the waist vs the "haunches" (widest point of the body). I'd always looked at the instrument from the aesthetic point of view, and ease of upper access point of view, rarely considering that the birdge was situated somewhere different as a result of those design choices.
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