Let's think about this. We use braces because they add a lot of stiffness for the weight. Most of us use braces with a more or less plain rectangular cross section. Yeah, you round off the top, but still... You could think of that, or even a traingular brace, as a bunch of tall narrow rectangular braces of different heights side by side. At least, that's what my calculus teacher said.
A more efficient use of materials, giving greater stiffness for the mass, is an I-beam. The 'flanges' at the top and botton take most of the tension and compression forces, and the 'web' in the center only has to withstand the shearing forces, and keep the flanges the right distance apart. The main problems with using these on guitar tops are that they require extra effort to make, and you can't voice them much once they're glued in.
The lattice in the Smallman guitars amounts to a bunch of I-beams. The flanges are carbon fiber, and the webs are balsa. Because of the relatively low modulus of ruture of balsa the webs have to be as wide as the flanges to hold up, but the idea is the same. The top surface is just a membrane to move air; he uses wood, but you could use mylar, as Tim White did in the 'Crysalis' guitars.
Suppose you sliced the webs up into paper thin pieces, leaving them as tall as they were before. You could space them pretty closely. If you used wide flanges on the top and bottom, you could glue those together to produce the surfaces. What you've got then is a sandwich top. In a sense, the sandwich isn't 'braceless', it's ALL brace!
It's still an I-beam though, getting most of it's stiffness from the material in the flanges/surfaces. These can only be made so thin before they become too fragile to work right, so there's a limit to how much stiffness you can remove. That's why these things are hard to tune; they either work or they don't.
Of course, as John Calkin said: "Give them volume and they'll hear tone". You can shave 40% or so off the weight of the top by making a sandwich, and it can be just as stiff as any normal braced top if you do it right. That weight saving translates into a lot of attack and power, and evens up the sound simply because there are no weak notes.
Since most of the weight of a top is in the top surface, rather than the bracing, it makes a certain amount of sense to make a sandwich for the top part that is only just as stiff as a normal unbraced top, and then brace it to get the rest, and allow for voicing. A normal steel string top might weigh 150 grams before bracing, so saving even 30% of that would get you down to 110 grams or so. Add in 30 grams of bracing and you're still not back to where you would have been with a normal top without the bracing, except this top won't fold up within the first week. You've saved over 20% of the weight. Sweet!
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