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35,000 year old wood


Faithless
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[url="http://www.americanguitarboutique.com/bass_detail_objectname_BG_Langcaster_5_String.aspx"]http://www.americanguitarboutique.com/bass...r_5_String.aspx[/url]

Looks like guys used 35k year old wood for makin' this bass :) How's that for ya?

Edited by Faithless
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[quote name='The Burpster' post='131736' date='Feb 1 2008, 09:27 AM']Similar to our 'bog oaks' here in Lincolnshire.....

I bet they could tell a few tales....

"Well the first 15thousand years lying around in a swamp were pretty boring but, next 15 thousnad years whizzed past!"

:)[/quote]

And people kept dropping strangled Celts into the bog right next to me ...

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Top contender for ugliest headstock ever IMHO, and the body´s not much better I´m afraid. :)

I remember DW building a (very) limited series of drums made from timber that had been hauled from the bottom of a lake in North America after maturing down there for a couple of centuries. These were some seriously beautiful instruments...

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It looks like, it might exactly be 35,000 years old without doing chemical analysis, and even using most advanced methods the error can be approximately 10,000 years.
The other thing, no one really knows what conditions that wood lived by..
Ah, there's also an opportunity to find out the age checking soil's layer where the wood was found in... But, they're simply rough raves...

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[quote name='The Burpster' post='131736' date='Feb 1 2008, 09:27 AM']Similar to our 'bog oaks' here in Lincolnshire.....

I bet they could tell a few tales....

"Well the first 15thousand years lying around in a swamp were pretty boring but, next 15 thousnad years whizzed past!"

:huh:[/quote]


[quote name='cetera' post='131921' date='Feb 1 2008, 01:42 PM']I much prefer this.....

[url="http://www.spectorbass.com/NewFiles/32kbass.html"]Spector 32K Bass[/url]

but, hey.... what's 3,000 years between friends ;)[/quote]

:) :huh: ;) ;)

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i'm sorry but that body is just awfull! and i don't mean that in that i think it's ugly. it just hasn't been well designed. all the contours and lines are out of whack. with wood that old i think they should have spent a little more time making sure they got the lines right..

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[quote name='cetera' post='131921' date='Feb 1 2008, 01:42 PM']I much prefer this.....

[url="http://www.spectorbass.com/NewFiles/32kbass.html"]Spector 32K Bass[/url]

but, hey.... what's 3,000 years between friends :)[/quote]

Damn, beat me to it.

The spector looks nicer, and the inlay is a fossil too.

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  • 8 months later...

[quote name='dlloyd' post='132468' date='Feb 2 2008, 11:00 AM']Kauri isn't basswood. They're enormous trees that grow only on the North Island of New Zealand, and have some pretty interesting wood working properties (but whether it's a good tone wood is another matter). The Agathis we see used as basswood is from other species.[/quote]

The latin name for basswood is [i]Tilia americana[/i], thats the stuff that is used mainly for guitar bodies because its good for mids. Its the same genus as our linden tree in the UK ([i]Tilia tormentosa[/i]). I guess you could try making a body out of that too if you wanted. :)

The kauri that is used in cheap-mid level basses and guitars is fijian kauri ([i]Agathis vitensis[/i]) and its plantation grown mostly in Indonesia as well as other parts of SE Asia. I believe the plantations contribute to habitat loss although not on the same scale as palm oil. The kauri that is reclaimed from swamps and grows in NZ is [i]Agathis australis[/i]. It's treated with acrylic resin (polymerised) to make it durable and capable of being worked. Kauri trees are protected in NZ because they're considered sacred by the Maori people as well as globally endangered. Some of the living trees are up to 1000 years old. Tane Mahuta, the biggest kauri tree in NZ is supposed to be between 1200 and 2500 years old. Although thats nothing compared to the 10,000 year old bristlecone pines still growing in Sweden.

My parents have a dining table set made from ancient swamp kauri that cost them about a thousand quid.

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I'd pick this this piece of old wood over the spector any day. :) :huh:

There's an explanation on the website [url="http://images.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://www.junkranch.com/resources/_wsb_275x701_slab.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.junkranch.com/6.html&h=701&w=275&sz=88&hl=en&start=2&sig2=AfWtqu4tLzhM-_1b_FsC0g&usg=__4oHqHHkr22GqMSU_TfTmUwxVAB4=&tbnid=lWVNBGsbQjnwQM:&tbnh=140&tbnw=55&ei=jQoKSeeeHZCq0wSk4ti5BA&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcustom%2Bbarn%2Bwood%2Bslab%2Bbass%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Doff"]here[/url].
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[quote name='The Burpster' post='318658' date='Oct 30 2008, 09:04 PM']Do you think they'd miss a PRS neck sized sliver missing from one side of it.....?

:)[/quote]
:huh: It's too soft to use for a neck. It gets dented even by fingernails.

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I was filming in Kew Gardens a month or two back in their wood specimens depository...
big lumps of all these rare woods they had collected over the centuries just sitting there. (all under controlled temperatures of course!)
I was drawing basses in my head on all the various bits. If I had access to a saw that day goodness knows what I would have tried pinching!

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