laurent wrote:
Todd Rose wrote:
My other concern with a top arched as you describe, Laurent, is that it wouldn't allow the wood to move as freely with changes in moisture content, so it might be somewhat more prone to cracking.
I am not an engineer and my knowledge of wood is mostly limited to building guitars…
That being said I think wood expands and contracts mostly across the grain and very little, if at all, along the grain. I believe arching the top across the grain would still allow the plate to move up and down, rather than crack with sudden humidity changes.
Yes, wood moves mostly across the grain, not along the grain. It also has some elasticity, thank goodness, or all guitar tops and backs would crack the first time the humidity drops. A domed top takes advantage of the elasticity by allowing the shape of the top to go from more domed to less domed as the wood dries out. It's sort of "pre-sprung", in a way, that makes it more compliant with that movement. Though it's only shrinking across the grain, it can flatten a bit along the grain as well to take up the change in dimensions. A cylindrically arched top won't have quite the same freedom of movement. It isn't really pre-sprung in the same way, it's just bent a bit in one direction. As it dries out, the center will dip down, so that, in cross section, it's less arched, but in side view, it will have to go from straight to concave as the center dips. It won't do that as easily as a domed top will go from more domed to less domed.
Whether or not, in actual practice, this will make much of a difference in the crack-resistance of the top, I really can't say. I'm just describing the theory of it, as I understand it. If anyone wants to step in with more detailed knowledge of wood movement, or experience with cylindrically arched tops, and disprove what I'm saying, please do so.