So the original Selmers had their tops bent over heat.
I have been a flatpicker for years and have played a lot of high end flat tops. Dana Bourgeois recently started using "heat torrefication" on the tops of his new "aged tone" series guitars. And in my estimation they sound much better than his older guitars. The idea is evidently to "cook out" everything but the cellulose and lignins to make the top lighter and better sounding.
I was actually surprised what a difference this made in sound.
Do those of you who have played the GJ guitars (Barault, DuPont Vielle Reserve, etc) with real heat pliage notice a big difference?
Comments
M
my 0,002.
I don´t have experience baking tops, mainly because my kitchen oven is to small for it but i was intrigued by it in the past and talked to several builders about it. The consensus amongst them was that the main benefit was long term stability with regard to humidity changes, although several mechanisms were proposed for it (changes to the structure of the cellular membrane or, as you said, crystallization of the resins, or maybe some other mechanism i´ve forgotten since). My problem with the resin thing is that resin is just a small (actually very small) and variable part of the top plate, and is localized on the resin canals, so anything that happens there will leave vast portions of the wood unchanged.
Regarding tone changes most (if not all) of the folks were skeptic (as i am, really) that it would actually improve tone in some discernible way, but experiments to prove these kind of assessments are typically hard to put together and scrutinize unbiasedly.
The thing you pointed out about "force aging" wood making it more fragile caught my attention and actually makes a lot of sense to me. Wood is mainly cellulose (roughly 50%), hemicellulose and lignin, as was stated above. Hemicellulose is the responsible for wood being hygroscopic, but doesn´t add much structurally after the tree is cut. It naturally tends to decompose over time, and that´s the main chemical difference between aged and young wood, but it takes a lot of time to do so. Lignin, on the other hand, is much more stable and plays a part on wood integrity and stiffness. Problem is that both lignin and hemicellulose get destroyed with heat (lignin at an higher and broader temperature interval than hemicellulose, but there´s overlap between them), so if you bake your tops at too high temperatures it should compromise their structural integrity. This is one of the reasons folks tend to cook their tops at lower temperatures for longer periods of time.
Sorry for the off-topic folks.