Is it just me, or is it a little harder to get nice even double stops on a radiused fretboard than a flat fretboard? Ergonomically, it seems that your right hand has to angle differently, especially on double stops on the A and E strings.
Is it just me, or is it a little harder to get nice even double stops on a radiused fretboard than a flat fretboard? Ergonomically, it seems that your right hand has to angle differently, especially on double stops on the A and E strings.
Well, writing for myself, I do not find it harder to execute double stops on a radiused fretboard.
unless a board has a really extreme radius it should just be a matter of time before you get used to making those double stops on the curve...
It's you.
;-)
Billy
Billy Packard
Gilchrist A3, 1993
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Double stops originated on bowed orchestral stringed instruments - violin, viola, cello, etc. These fingerboards are much more radiused than any mandolin you'll ever find. Yet players have been executing double stops on them for centuries.
I have more flat than radiused fretboards on my various mandolin-family instruments. Like nut width and other things that matter a great deal to some players, I never notice or even think about it until asked.
Hmmm? Sounds like it's me.
I find everything easier on a radiused fretboard.
I think the right hand is a tiny bit easier on flat boards with all the strings on the same plane. Left hand prefers a radius.
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I find it harder on a radiused fretboard to do anything that involves one finger pressing down two courses at once. Luckily very few of the double stops I use involve only one finger, and even if the other note is on the same fret I can usually get a second finger in there, and prefer it.
Maybe its not the radius but the string spacing or action that is causing the issue.
2014 AL Smart F5
1988 Givens A
1921 Gibson A
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2002 Martin D-18V
1999 Huss and Dalton CM Custom
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That was my first thought.
A radiused board should effectively give you more "finger-room" between otherwise-equally-spaced courses but, IMHO, that would primarily apply to fretting a course in between two outlying courses, where the radius provides room for the fretting finger to overhang those adjacent courses. In the case of double stops... well, maybe you're avoiding touching the adjacent non-played strings as well? Touching them, or even inadvertantly fretting them, should make little difference.
- Ed
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I use barre chords a lot, including for double and triple stops... And I have a flat fingerboard F-style and a radiused fingerboard F-style. I would have thought that barre chords would be tougher on one of these than the other, but in reality I really don't notice any difference.
I would think that fret height differences between mandolins could result in more felt difference than the subtle radiuses that are usually found on mandolin fingerboards.
-- Don
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The radius seems to help with reach more than anything. It's 14" scale length with a 1+ " nut.
Fender guitars with a 25 1/2 " scale length commonly have a 9.5" radius and some have a 7 1/4" which helps with chording.
I like a 12" radius on everything I play. I switch instruments a lot and that familiarity is there, so I adjust to the scale lenght.
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