Cederick said:
I know some people say neck through guitars suffers from a sustain loss due to the gluing:
but doesn't a laminate top use even more glue than that, PLUS occasionally even being a wood that's not good for tone? :dontknow:
This is a deep subject with guitars. But, here are a few things to think about.
Think of a glue joint as a shock absorber. Then, think of cross-grains as a way of strengthening.
If you take any old piece of 1" thick plywood and give it a knock, it'll sound deader than... something very dead. No ringing, no resonance, nothing. It's almost like knocking on rubber. But, it'll be
very stiff. Much stiffer than a solid piece of the wood it's made of. It's the reason people use plywood rather than solid pieces of wood to do a lot of things (disregarding size and convenience issues).
On a guitar, that can work for and against you.
On the one hand, those glue joints are going to absorb certain frequencies. Which ones? Nobody knows. Gotta play the thing to find out, because regardless of the glue joints, wood has variable densities even within the same species and the same tree. Plus different glues harden differently. It's all pretty unpredictable.
On the other hand, the increased stiffness is going to force the construction to maintain shape against external stress, which translates into increased sustain. Density comes into play, too. Inertia is not to be trifled with. Newton's laws, and all that.
Considering all that, you have to discount anything you hear about whether or not a laminated or through-body neck is a Good Thing. It comes down to the variability of construction methods and materials. Chances are if you play a guitar with a laminated or through-body neck, it's going to sound very dead acoustically. Plug the little rascal in, though, and it'll sustain for days. Frequency response is up for grabs.