David Collins wrote:
This is one of the points of discussion that often drives me nuts. I know that people do use the word tension in different ways, but I simply can't tolerate it. "Stiffness" may be a good word, but I hold that tension specifically means and should only ever be used to describe the amount of force along the length of the string. There is simply no way a person can directly feel the tension unless they are pulling on the end of the string to pull it up to pitch. The amount of force needed to deflect a string perpendicular to it's length is not tension. I don't care how many people call it that in error, I will not bend on this one.
If a shorter scale length guitar feels stiffer to you, it's probably just because it's set up poorly. That or the obvious heavier gauge strings, but there are tons of other variables as well. Feel is such a subjective thing, and I can set up two guitars of identical scale length and strings to identical setup measurements, and some players may perceive one as feeling stiffer than another. Different neck shape, fingerboard radius, fret wire size, even if it may take the same measured amount of force to press the string against a fret, there can often be a subjective though very real difference in the player's perception.
If your short scale feels stiffer than your long scale though, it's most likely due more to a truly bad setup than subjective perception.
Keep in mind, though, that if two strings of different lengths have the same tension ( not the situation here, since we're talking about higher tension in the longer string to maintain the same pitch) the shorter string will actually be stiffer laterally.
The lateral stiffness of a string ( excluding the bending stiffness of the string, which is generally negligible) is proportional to the string tension and inversely proportional to the string length.
This increase in stiffness in the shorter string does not make up for the decrease in stiffness due to the decreased tension. The decrease in tension for a shorter string ( at the same pitch) is a square function of string length, so it is greater than the increase in stiffness due to the shorter string length.
To try to simplify this, here's an example. If you make a particular string 5 % shorter and maintain the pitch, the tension decreases by about 10%, but the lateral stiffness decreases by only about 5%, or, half as much as the tension decrease.
Phil