Didn't someone already do that with a cheap Strat copy, albeit for the other bone of contention debate?
I know in the 70s there were all sorts of experiments to add mass to the whole guitar. Someone must've experimented with it enough. Maybe they didn't have it down to an exact science, because super heavy guitars sort of went away.
Personally, I think certain modern guitars sustain so well because of improvements to the construction methods. Better design, tighter tolerances, superior materials, fewer moving parts, and the parts that do move have less play within them. I think that's why we're seeing lightweight guitars that sustain so well. Since the current trend is lightweight guitars the best made guitars are typically lightweight, so they're getting the best hardware with the most attention to detail.
Good stuff all around
The table trick is fun- I actually practiced that way in college (resting the guitar body on the table) to keep the chops up without getting death threats from neighbors in the days before master vol
Sounds like all agree neck has a lot to do with sustain- Again from personal experience I think this is true because I play, wide 25.5s that tend to be relatively massive.
The Alembec brass block example is interesting- I had been told that it was increasing the mass of the guitar- decreasing vibration of the body and forcing the wave to stay in the string, but it sounds like it may be doing something differnt than I had heard?
Frankly, I'm doing the build, so I might as well play around with it- But I would still love to see the data.
Unfortunately it wont be soon, too many other projects will come first- maybe someone will write a paper before I get back to it
Cheers,
ZStrat
you might wanna try the wall test as well. Pushing the neck against the wall might alter your sustain.