Koa is a hawaiian hardwood and a ukulele wood held in very high esteem in those islands.
Best type of wood for ukulele.
The are a lot of great sounding ukes with spruce or cedar top and back and side of rosewood or mahogany to name just two.
The type of wood used to make the uke affects its tone.
Most ukeleles have tops made from darker woods such as mahogany but the vintage spruce soprano has a spruce top basically a smaller version of what s found on most acoustic guitars.
Choosing the best wood for your ukulele.
It has a fairly dynamic mid range sound and an accentuated top end.
A laminate uke means the body is not made from solid pieces of timber but rather from thin pieces of wood that has been sandwiched together from much thinner pieces.
Many factors should go into your ukulele purchase including your skill level.
Here comes another star in the wood world and a personal favorite of mine.
The term tonewood refers to woods that are chosen for instruments based on how they will affect the.
Koa is very responsive warm and with a good sustain.
The sound of a koa ukulele is simply.
This is a special type of acacia tree that only grows in hawaii and only this wood is allowed to be named koa.
For all of you looking.
Different ukulele wood types mahogany.
The very best wood is the one you like the sound of best.
It has great strength at lower weights.
Loud rich and used in the finest ukuleles but very expensive.
It is much less dense than other hard woods like rosewood and most exotic dark woods and more dense than softwoods like spruce and cedar.
Some common examples of softwood tops include spruce cedar and redwood.
In the ukulele world almost everyone uses it for their neck.
Mahogany is a hard wood but in the middle of the spectrum.
Instruments from hawaii are usually built from koa wood.
They really are apples and oranges.
Very sweet sounding and warm.
The wood is beautiful to look at with amazing grains particularly the curly variety and provides a sound that suits the ukulele perfectly.
Traditional woods for ukuleles are all koa and all mahogany.
An inexpensive wood spruce is usually found on the less expensive solid wood ukuleles.
Early on it became the ukulele sound.
Proven hardwoods for ukulele backs and sides include maple rosewood mahogany koa walnut and ebony.
Plywood for want of a better term in the worst examples.
I often encourage customers to avoid comparisons between these modern style instruments and the more traditional approach to building.