Boogafunk said:
fyi, the hardware was just set in place for picture purposes. that is just standard grill material that was sheared and bent by us. the same as most other manufacturers use. i believe it came from penn fabrication.
i still like the "other" grills we use better, but i will concede that for this application the traditional grill looks better. i think we nailed the color, but considering we only had a digital photo sent to us via email, we shall see.
Could you tell us about the construction? Ebay auction says the wood is "arouco", Stapled and glued.
I've never heard of "arouco" from what I can find it sounds like a cheaper wood like luan or something. I'm not a woodworker, so really I know nothing about this stuff. Tonal characteristics compared to birch? Weight?
What kind of jointing is used? Is this what was used in the original thieles? Was finger/dado jointing of any type used? If not why was another technique chosen?
I also agree, I MUCH prefer the Grill shown in this post. Classy. I would think that big grill interferes with the sound and might induce comb filtering? (Which could be good or bad and I'm sure all grills do to some extent)
I read this from an HC review: "They also showed me the internal damping that goes inside the cab. They explained that this was a key step that mesa had omitted on their production cabs, and that the cabinet had originally been speced out that way from electovoice. They said this tightens the bass response. " Could you elaborate on this difference? Does it mean there's less bass than a Mesa Theile? "Tightens the bass" Is used in so many different ways these days....
Lastly I see there's many colors available. (Cool!) Can you show us more pictures of the standard colors? I've only seen Orange, Blue, Purple, Black, and the cream above. I guess the only one not shown is Red!
What is the upcharge for other colors?
Also the cab in the above pic looks a LOT like vinyl, where the other pictures of your cabs have a "Hammertone" sorta look. Did you do anything different? Perhaps refining of the process? Or the picture just came out that way, and the color lends itself to looking smoother?