Apparently they are back as of July 2009, the Republic RP-1 guitars which are within 96% the dimensions of a mid-19th century Martin. Now they cost $350., so not the deal they once were, but compared to a full-up reproduction guitar at over $1000 still worth considering IMHO, being no more inaccurate than a post-1900 antique parlor guitar which is another path to reasonable-cost authenticity, except the RP-1 has no antique issues.
The RP-1 is a modern take on an 1856 pattern guitar, so the interior construction and tuning hardware are not museum-grade authentic reproductions, (i.e to de-farb a bit you replace all Phillips-head screws etc.) but a few of us with this model have found that these guitars can be strung with period gut/wire wound silk strings (or faux-gut strings) and they are still loud enough. (Ordinarily a guitar braced for steel strings is braced too stiff to pick up gut string vibrations very well).
I don't recommend this a best solution, just an ok solution for a reenactor's guitar that sounds and plays period -- while we save for a genuine reproduction. Keep or toss the idea.
Dan Wykes
The RP-1 is a modern take on an 1856 pattern guitar, so the interior construction and tuning hardware are not museum-grade authentic reproductions, (i.e to de-farb a bit you replace all Phillips-head screws etc.) but a few of us with this model have found that these guitars can be strung with period gut/wire wound silk strings (or faux-gut strings) and they are still loud enough. (Ordinarily a guitar braced for steel strings is braced too stiff to pick up gut string vibrations very well).
I don't recommend this a best solution, just an ok solution for a reenactor's guitar that sounds and plays period -- while we save for a genuine reproduction. Keep or toss the idea.
Dan Wykes
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