Sample Naming Conventions:

Each sample is uniquely defined by a multi-field name.
The name describes:
Sample number, Chord type, Strum direction, Loop status, EQ status

Naming fields are delimited by a "/" for clarity.
example: 0017/emd/lp
0017 is the sample number
emd describes the chord (e minor downstrum, in this case)
lp means the sample is looped

All samples have a unique number.
Users can combine samples in one large folder.
The Martin 6 string samples have a format of 0XXX. The Martin 6 string is the M6.
The Martin 12 string samples have a format of 1XXX. The Martin 12 string is the M12.
The Guild 6 string samples have a format of 2XXX. The Guild 6 string is the G6.
Future guitar projects from us will follow the same format.

All samples are descriptively named.
The first numbers (before the "/") are unique sample number
The next field (after the "/") is the chord type and strum direction
The next field (after the "/") describes looped or unlooped

Examples:
0021/emr/lp -Martin 6 string, E minor, rake, looped
0005/esd/ul -Martin 6 string, E sus downstrum, unlooped
1833/Dr/lp - Martin 12 string, D major rake (down), looped
1724/C#+u/lp - Martin 12 string, C# augmented, upstrum, looped

Summary of sample naming convention:

Chord types
m - Minor
s - Sus
- - Diminished
+ - Augmented

Strum direction
d - Down
u - Up
r - (Down) Rake

Looping status
/ul - unlooped
/lp - looped

EQ status
no suffix - unprocessed samples
Q suffix - EQ'ed samples (through TDM digital EQ for smoother response)