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'73 1117-4 Strange Bracing

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arumako
Posted 2019-07-24 12:42 AM (#549481 - in reply to #549466)
Subject: Re: '73 1117-4 Strange Bracing



Joined:
October 2012
Posts: 1034

Location: Yokohama, Japan

Love O Fair - 2019-07-23  8:59 AM

But if the guitar ever gets confused and runs away from home, maybe the first place to go looking would be the ice rink.

Lol! Thanks Al! As long as she doesn't board a plane to search for her Canadian roots, I think I'll be okay!

jay - 2019-07-22 3:27 PM

Could this be some of the R&D experimentation during the transition period that CK was trying to improve audio calibration signatures and deflection grading of the soundboards in the deep bowl? In late 73 he ordered 50 Legends with A bracing... and the rest is history.

That's some great insight jay. The book by Walter Carter tells us that Mr. Kaman was using the Martin as his standard. My 1117-4 sounds different but very Martinesque. I remember Dan Savage built a guitar for a guy named Paul Solty who asked how Dan managed "to squeeze a Martin HD-28 into an Ovation body." Dan opted for a forward shifted X-brace (with torrefied top and bracing). The thread is here if anybody is interested,

http://ovationfanclub.com/megabbs/forums/thread-view.asp?tid=48665&posts=23&start=1

However, it's interesting that Mr. Kaman didn't settle for X-bracing after all the different patterns attempted on production guitars upto that point (Damon67's "VT-9" Deluxe Balladeer earlier in the thread is really interesting). It only hit me recently how significant an engineering feat the A-brace is. I may be wrong, but a chronological review of Ovation bracing patterns suggests that the A-brace became the standard on which the Quintad bracing for the Adamas and the Elites were developed. I just can't say enough about the Quintad bracing on my 1678 and 1868 - incredibly responsive and durable. Can I hear a, "Bye, bye cross-bracing!" from anybody? It's also interesting that peripheral patterns like the K-5 (that seem theoretically sound) were done away with. Really interesting stuff!

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DetlefMichel
Posted 2019-07-24 9:18 AM (#549485 - in reply to #529058)
Subject: RE: '73 1117-4 Strange Bracing



Joined:
May 2011
Posts: 755

Location: Muenster/Germany

I am quite conviced about the advatages of any non-croos-bracing. The sound and durability of Adamas or Elite guitars proof it. That´s why I some years ago choose a bracing like this when I decided to have a custom 12string guitar built for me from my favourite luthier Ernie Rissmann. He built a short-scale 12fret cutaway guitar with a deep body and a spanish body size, with offset soundholes. The bracing is even thinner than that of Ovation 12string guitars and has only one (curved!) transversal brace instead of 2 straight ones. The result is such a powerful guitar that I later had a nylonstring and a 6-string made with the same features. These 3 guitars can easily outplay any other of my guitars.
Here are pics of the 12 string braces, the Nylonstring and the 6-steelstring:


The Ovation A braced guitar have a wonderful sound, though, but the bracing pattern has a weak spot: there is no complete brace through the whole lenght of the top, and the metal reinforcements on that point are too soft and not very elegant..my parlor 12 string guitar´s top almost broke down in the middle, this would not have happened if there woud habe been 2 supending long braces instead. The Gibson Mark bracing of the 70´s  had the same problem, great sounding but the tops tended to move too much. I had one...Besides that continuosly fixed long brace surely will perform better than a 3-piece patchwork. See above.
And you can play much lighter strings on a guitar with fan bracing than with X-bracing, with same results. But..does the fan bracing only make sense when you do not use a center soundhole? Did anyone try to make a dreadnought-body guitar with a stronger fan bracing?? Why not, the center-soundhole CL sound great...

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d'ovation
Posted 2019-07-24 9:55 AM (#549486 - in reply to #529058)
Subject: Re: '73 1117-4 Strange Bracing


Joined:
December 2003
Posts: 848

Location: Canada
And last year Taylor revolutionized the guitar world by inventing V-bracing ... which to me looks just like reversed A-bracing ...
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arumako
Posted 2019-07-25 1:29 AM (#549496 - in reply to #549485)
Subject: RE: '73 1117-4 Strange Bracing



Joined:
October 2012
Posts: 1034

Location: Yokohama, Japan

Hi DetlefMichel! It's always very cool to get your take on things here at the OFC. Thanks for sharing pictures of your Rissman guitars! Just fabulous. I don't think you've ever uploaded any videos of those! Would love to hear them all, but especially that nylon stringer! If you get a chance, please upload a video or two! I'm already subscribed to your channel so even if you don't post it here, I'll definitely see it.

DetlefMichel - 2019-07-23 11:18 PM

I am quite conviced about the advatages of any non-croos-bracing. The sound and durability of Adamas or Elite guitars proof it.

I'm no engineer, so I need to be careful about over simplification of complex acoustic constructions, but I'm in total agreement with you about unnecessary cross-bracings under the bridge area. In reality, the bridge itself acts like a short cross-brace anyway; and the simplicity of the Quintad design is just so elegant.

DetlefMichel - 2019-07-23 11:18 PM

...this would not have happened if there woud habe been 2 supending long braces instead. The Gibson Mark bracing of the 70´s  had the same problem, great sounding but the tops tended to move too much. I had one...Besides that continuosly fixed long brace surely will perform better than a 3-piece patchwork.

Now see, that's just it. My 1612 rebuilt by Dan Savage has a K-5 bracing pattern that does exactly what you say. Long braces along the length of the guitar on both sides of the sound hole like this (pre-rebuild photo);

K-5

You'd think this would work better than an A-brace, but the K-5 was short-lived and eventually discontinued. My 1612 is completely torrefied, and the closest thing to a deep bowl A-braced guitar I have is my 97C (which I do love), but it's a 12-Fretter. One of my 1861s and my 5986 is A-braced, but they're both SSBs and are not comparable. However, when comparing just the bracing patterns (a lot of subtle differences, but...), the A-brace has a bit of a "tighter waist" where the lower cross-brace meets the lateral braces;

A-brace

Seems like that would allow the top to resonate just a bit more. All 7 of the lateral braces on the A-brace extend close to the butt end of the guitar whereas only 5 out of the 7 lateral braces extend down toward the butt end on the K-5. Frankly, even if I had a directly comparable guitar, I get the feeling, I wouldn't be able to tell an A-braced guitar from a K-5 braced guitar, but with the sensitivity of the equipment that Mr. Kaman was using, these little physical geometric differences could have looked massive? The Quintad bracing is every bit as interesting...

Q-bracing

The area on the bass side of the guitar is a little more restricted and the braces fan out a little bit more than an A-brace, but the all lateral bracing construction must contribute to a more unified movement of the soundboard which would enable the top to "pump-oout" more resonance so to speak. Anyway, thanks for chimming in with your insights and please share some sound bites of those beautiful Rissman guitars when you have time!

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keldon85
Posted 2019-10-29 9:57 AM (#550252 - in reply to #529058)
Subject: Re: '73 1117-4 Strange Bracing


Joined:
July 2019
Posts: 106

Location: northern Georgia
For another data point, the top on the 1974 1617 Legend that I am rebuilding had the same addition to the VT11 bracing, painted black like the rest of the braces visible near the sound hole. This was clearly something added in the factory as part of the normal production at the time. However, since the Ovation diagrams showing bracing patterns don't include this, I suspect it was added sometime after serial production started to take care of a problem they were having. It does not show in the patent documentation for the VT-series instruments.
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