Alan, thanks for commenting! I tried covering part of the soundhole like you said, and I did notice an increase in the coupling effect as the pitches came closer to one another. Very interesting!
Alan Carruth wrote:
The neck mode by itself can't radiate any appreciable amount of sound. At that frequency the wave length of sound in air is 'way too long to be produced effectively by something as small as the headstock, which is the part that's moving the most.
If the nodes of the neck resonant mode are typically found near the nut and somewhere across the lower bout, doesn't that mean that the antinode (which I thought was the part that moved the most) is in the middle, near the neck block, and not the headstock? In any case, if the goal is to raise the pitch of the neck mode, is it such that reducing mass and increasing stiffness is most effective if it is done as near the antinode as possible? If so, in addition to beefing up the neck near the heel, do you think it would be an idea to extend the CF rods into the headstock, and maybe stiffen up the upper bout as well? Thanks again, and sorry for all the questions.
Stefan, by increasing the scale length, the strings will have higher tension at the same pitch. Maybe that is part of the reason why the B-string sounds less floppy? Or maybe, when you changed the scale length, the bridge was moved closer to one of the nodes (stationary points in the resonant mode) of the neck mode, so that less of the string's energy is used to drive the neck mode? This should give you less acoustic volume and more sustain.
Darryl, from what I understood, lamination alone does not make the neck stiffer, only more stable. Unless of course, the lamina is stiffer than the rest of the neck material... Thanks again for the comments, folks!