I've never looked at this on my guitars and I got to thinking and realized I have the numbers in my build notes to calculate how much the top rises.
Before I make the bridge and saddle, I use a straight edge to project fret plane to the position of the saddle, measure the height above the top, and add 5/32 (corresponding to 5/64 action at the 12th fret) to that to decide how tall to make the bridge and the saddle blank as a starting point for fitting the bridge plus saddle to the top. After the guitar is strung up, I know what the combined height of the saddle plus bridge is after having set the final action. The difference is how much the top moved upward.
I pulled numbers from my notes for two dreadnoughts, two of my middle-size guitars, and two parlor guitars.
Top movement Dreadnoughts: 0.073" and 0.103" Mid-sized: 0.096" and 0.044" Parlor: 0.061" and 0.026"
The octave mandotar I just finished: 0.077"
It's interesting to me that, to my ears, the numbers don't really correspond to how loud, bright, or bassy they sound. The parlor guitar that had only 0.026" of movement is the only one of these guitars with tapered rather than scalloped x-braces. I don't know if that has anything to do with it. That guitar sounds killer when played with finger picks.
_________________ Once in a while you get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right - Robert Hunter
These users thanked the author J De Rocher for the post: Pmaj7 (Thu Apr 30, 2020 9:39 pm) |
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