[QUOTE=Mattia Valente] [QUOTE=sfbrown]
Semi-serious question: Has the glue technology improved at all since WWII? I would like to see the report. Not that I dispute its results because I do think a planed joint is stronger but how good does it have to be to withstand the stresses of guitar building? Couple that with advances in technology and I would like to know if there is a more current study.
Oh, and I promise not to rotate my guitars any faster than 100 RPM.
Steve[/QUOTE]
Hehe...not a clue. And for honesty's sake, I really don't mind gluing sanded joints, and I do where I have to. But if I can plane, I do. It's fast, perfect surface, no dust, and just downright more *fun* than sanding.
As for glue tech...hide glue's what it's been for ever and ever, and I don't know how old Titebond Original is; for glues, I think tried-and-tested, been around for more than a decade is a good thing; you know the long-term viability of the things. Epoxy and Polyurethanes are, I'd guess, much newer in terms of chemistries, but the applications in lutherie are fairly limited...[/QUOTE]
Exactly my thoughts. If all they had to compare was hide glue and white glue for instance, the results today, while interesting don't speak to the ultimate strength of state-of-the-art adhesives and their effect on glue joint prep. The other thing I have to ask is with current glues such as Tite-bond, that are stronger than the wood, isn't the additional surface area created by a sanding process actually advantageous? In other words, more surface area, more strength?
These are just thoughts. I'm not saying that I subscribe to anything I just said but it is a way to look at it.
Steve