Alan Carruth wrote:
An adjustable rod addresses a problem that can't be dealt with in any other way; 'cold creep'. When subjected to a bending stress wood 'creeps' in the direction of force. This is a result of the thermoplastic nature of lignin; the glue that holds all of the structure of the wood together. Thermoplastics soften under heat, but they also normally will creep under any stress, no matter how small. We take advantage of the ability to heat bend wood parts, but pay for it by having to live with the creep.
FAA rules say that a wooden aircraft structure must be designed so that the maximum displacement under design loads is less than 1/3 of the displacement that can be tolerated. That tells you how much a structure can creep over time. We see this, and the sorts of fixes it demands all the time. A wooden telephone pole that is not guyed back will lean in the direction of a wire lead out to a house. There's no way the weight of that wire can bend the pole noticeably in the short term, but over time it will take quite a set. Wooden sailing ships, such as the U.S.S Constitution, that are kept as memorials, have to be turned around annually. Otherwise the shrinkage of the sun on one side of the masts will cause them to bend to the south.
Trees use a certain amount of pre-stressing and other adaptations to enable them to hold branches up and keep the trunk from bending in unwanted directions. In extreme cases they use a specialized structure; 'reaction wood', to deal with unbalanced loads. Such wood is unstable, with unusual shrinkage in response to humidity changes, and that, along with high built-in stress, and often a 'fuzzy' grain structure that is hard to cut cleanly and finish, makes it unusable for most woodworking.
The wood we do use thus has no real ability to withstand the sort of long-term stress that string tension puts on a neck. Various expedients have been used over the years to mitigate the issue, including deep 'V' section necks to add stiffness, and lamination of wood, such as ebony, that has more creep resistance. Eventually Gibson patented the adjustable truss rod, which solved the problem.
Ideally, a truss rod would allow the maker to produce a downward force on the neck at the nut that exactly balances the upward force of the strings. This would, in theory, double the compression load on the neck, but that's not an issue, since wood is very well designed to handle straight compression. In practice, there are things that make this less plausible.
One is that the frets themselves produce a backward bending force on the neck, because they fit tightly into the slots. This 'compression fretting' system was used for along time as a way to adjust neck bow; a repairman would have frets with the same size bead, but different tang widths, that would allow for fine-tuning of the neck profile on a non-adjustable neck. This requires some skill and practice to get right, and, of course, the right supplies.
Fingerboards typically have a different shrinkage rate with changes in humidity than the necks they're glued to. As the humidity changes with the seasons the neck can bow upward or downward.
The grain of the wood in the neck may not be straight, and that can give it different stiffness from one place to another, and different creep.
A steel or CF reinforcement in the neck will limit creep, but not eliminate it. As the neck moves the reinforcement takes more and more of the load, until a balance is reached where the further creep is masked by seasonal changes and other 'noise'.
Note, too that the wood in the box creeps as well. Over time the guitar body tries to swallow itself through it's own sound hole, and there's really not much you can do about that in a standard design. Some makers are using 'flying braces' from the base of the neck to the waist to fight this; well find out in a few decades how well it works. This is the most usual cause of high action on an older guitar. No truss rod or other neck reinforcement will stop this. Most neck re-sets are needed because of deformation of the box, not because of bending of the neck.
Although tightening an adjustable truss rod will lower the action a little bit that's not what it's for. Over tightening the truss rod to get the action down because the box has deformed will eventually cause the neck to 'creep' into a back bow, and cause fret buzz in the lower positions that is hard to fix.
Rant over....
Not a rant.
Good info
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk