
Steenamaroo
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If you're biting your tongue and someone's shouting 'bullcrap', there are sides.
I hope you get to the bottom of your issues.
I hope you get to the bottom of your issues.
I think you underestimate how bored I get at work.Yes. I get that. I started the thread around a year ago. In that time I've only had a handful of opportunities to sit down and focus on the problem in peace. And in that time my understanding of the problem has changed etc. I'm not gonna start tinkering until I'm ready and it's a good thing I didn't because now I think I've got more of an idea than I did before. In the meantime, it's just chat. Big deal. Typing on the internet costs me nothing and sure doesn't cost other people anything. The only price being paid is in whatever frustration other people may or may not feel from reading an internet forum and feeling mad. You don't have to read it. The internet is a big place.
Not to be a smart ass, but another POV is, personality of the guitar? I mean to me, my acoustics, more than the electrics all have their own personality. Even my cheapest acoustic has a personality that I can't get from the others. In certain situations I wouldn't use it, but for others, I can't replicate it with any other guitar.Here's a couple of files. To keep it very simple I struck a single note...the C, 1st fret B string. I did this because over time I have narrowed the problem down to this note as the main offender. Not the only offender...but the main offender. For example, the C# note, 2nd fret B string has no such problem. The open B string has no such problem.
A word on the 2 examples (same guitar, same recording):
Guitar A - Only the note in question played, no EQ or manipulation
Guitar B - Only the note in question played but at the start of the clip I have a narrow Q at 796hz (note is G5) in place to reduce the problem by 15db. As the clip plays I gradually reintroduce the problem by slowly bring up the 15db back to 0 so the clip is back to normal. Later in the clip I reduce that 796hz again by -15db and then reintroduce it again.
So the problem I am hearing is at 796hz. There is an "overtone" (or whatever you want to call it) ringing a G5 note. This is 100% not the room or the microphone or anything else like that. It comes directly from the guitar. It is baked into the guitar. This is what the naked ear hears. As you can imagine...playing any chord with that 1st fret B string note involved creates complex problems. I hope and trust you can hear the problem just from striking the single note itself as in the examples. Since an acoustic guitar produces a very complex combination of sounds...when that C note is part of a chord it creates big problems. I can EQ the problem away to some extent at 796hz when striking the single note...but when the problem is part of chords...this complex combo of strings, notes and sounds it is not easy to get rid of.
I guess I'd recommend headphones for this with a suitable volume. But good speakers will show it too.
Honestly, I think what you're hearing is what a guitar does.Here's a couple of files. To keep it very simple I struck a single note...the C, 1st fret B string.
I disagree that it is natural and what a guitar does. There is a fault here. This isn't normal. The other strings were muted. There was no sympathetic ringing of the open G since there was no open G in the picture. All other strings were muted and only the note played is what is heard.Honestly, I think what you're hearing is what a guitar does.
I believe you're hearing a natural component of the note you're playing, more so as the fundamental naturally fades,
and also the same pitch from the sympathetic ringing of the open G string.
Muting the other strings whilst performing your test would go some way to confirming, as I mentioned a few times.
You'll still hear the same 5th/G component, but nowhere near as pronounced.
You can even do your test as you did then just touch the G string with your finger while the ringing 5th is strong.
The fifth will remain but nowhere near as strong.
If it was my problem I'd be looking at the saddle, on the basis that the fundamental note you're playing seems to be fading faster than expected.
A worn, damaged, or badly shaped saddle will impede the fundamental note before any other component - think pinched harmonic.
I'd be inspecting the frets too. It works both ways.
Right. Saddle is what I think.Playing the single note, I hear the ringing that is bugging you. It sounds to me more like what I hear when a string is fretting out. On the low E, it really stands out as a buzz, but as base frequency rises, it becomes harder to hear. Could it be the saddle... maybe. It doesn't sound like wood vibrating, more hard plastic or metallic.
I've listened to Guitar A and Guitar B mp3 files many times.. Guitar A mp3 file certainly does possess a low tone belllike overtone to it that quickly tapers off and then (all of sudden) we hear a pronounced higher pitched resonance or echo at a higher frequency. That can happen whenever a single mic is improperly positioned directly in front of the sound hole. Acoustic guitars are beastly!I just thought my room sounded terrible or that I was using the wrong mike or had terrible mike placement.