American Cherry
Family:
Rosaceae - Order: Rosales - Class: Magnoliopsida
Scientific name: Prunus
serotina
Trade
name: American Cherry
Also
known as Wild Black Cherry, Black Cherry, Rum Cherry
Origin:
Eastern North America
Instrumental
uses:
Guitar back and sides, electric guitar bodies, head plates and bindings.
Tonal
properties:
Surprising tonal properties and overall wood
properties, placed between maple and mahoganies.
Used often on guitar back and sides, electric
guitar bodies and necks as well.
High projection on the midrange and flat on
the bass or high frequencies. Punchy as maple but deep sounding, clean and
dynamic, with sustain and very clear overall frequency range.
Very good workability and very good natural
finish.
Medium
density reference nearly 560 kg/m3
All these Cherry trees exist as sub-species
and varieties too numerable to mention here. The cherry is the fruit of these
varietals, some of them edible. The leaves are simple and usually whole with a
saw-edge margin. The cultivation of cherry is held in cold regions and they don’t
attain much height, occasionally 10m tall.
The sapwood is pale whitish cream and the
heartwood is pinkish brown or red
brownish, turning to reddish brown after light exposure.
CITES status
is unrestricted. Is reported on the IUCN Red List as least concern.