TENORA Honduras rosewood
Front : Aluminum (semi-matte black anodized finish)
Body : PLA resin (3D printed), partially stainless steel.
Rear : Wood(Honduras rosewood)



TENORA with Honduran Rosewood Backplate
This model uses Honduran Rosewood, which is a rare burl among rosewoods. In terms of hardness and density, it’s among the most standard of the woods handled by 634EARS. This particular piece is burl and well-dried, giving it a slightly harder feel.
You can sense a good balance of TENORA’s characteristic slim, refined mid-to-high range and its wide low end, with a slightly warm temperature to the sound. Perhaps due to its warm resonance, there’s a touch of lushness around the mid–high-mid frequencies.
Compared to my personal TENORA made with Ezo cherry, the Honduran Rosewood model offers a slightly more pronounced edge in the contours, resulting in a bit more snap to the sound. Still, as a whole, it remains relatively mild in character. I also find the Honduran Rosewood version to have a slightly higher tonal center than the Ezo cherry version.
Rosewoods, in general, strike a middle ground—neither too mild nor too sharp—while still offering a warm, woody resonance. Using this as a baseline:
If you want a sharper, slimmer, and more rigid sound, choose a harder wood.
If you prefer something milder, softer, go for a softer wood.
If you’re after a bright tone or more open feeling, look for a wood that has a certain level of hardness but lower density.