As you move down the fretboard from the nut to the 22nd fret, the fretboard gets wider. Does anybody know what that angle is?
Take the measurements straight off the guitar. It is a trapezoid. Math is cool...I'll buy the Bartlett plans and calculate based on the dimensions. My old template has degraded and I need to make a new one. If MDF gets wet it distorts and is ruined.
Hey, tabascom, we are trying to stick with English here.A little bit of trig. I think the nut is 1.685" nominal. At 23rd fret it may something like 2.35"? 18" between the two distances. Subtract the two widths to get 0.665". Then divide that by 2 to get 0.333. Then you need to figure out if you need to use sine, cosine or tangent. In this case it is the tangent function (opposite/adjacent). The opposite side of the triangle would be the 0.333" and the adjacent would be roughly 18" if using the 23rd fret spot. 0.333/18 = 0.0185. You would then need to use the inverse tangent function on a calculator to get the angle of approximately 1.059 degrees.
A little bit of trig. I think the nut is 1.685" nominal. At 23rd fret it may something like 2.35"? 18" between the two distances. Subtract the two widths to get 0.665". Then divide that by 2 to get 0.333. Then you need to figure out if you need to use sine, cosine or tangent. In this case it is the tangent function (opposite/adjacent). The opposite side of the triangle would be the 0.333" and the adjacent would be roughly 18" if using the 23rd fret spot. 0.333/18 = 0.0185. You would then need to use the inverse tangent function on a calculator to get the angle of approximately 1.059 degrees.
I am also a little perplexed by the question. You do not need the angle. There are 3 dimensions you need. The nut width, width at the other end of the board, and the distance from the nut to the other end of the board. Then you need a ruler and cut along those 4 lines. Am I missing something here. Why would you need the angle?
Regards Peter.
You would want the angular information if you were to have your templates CNC machined by your friendly local machine shop.
Or if you are using CNC to cut neck mortises that are done PRS style, which are full fingerboard width including the taper.