ToddStock wrote:
Please educate me as to why the force required for sideways displacement of a string would have any dependency on break angle...I'm not seeing any linkage here for identical string sets, scale length, etc.
K.O. has it right, except it isn't the feel of a longer scale; that would feel like greater tension.
The force required to push a string to the side is dependent in part on the string being able to move through the slot (or over the bridge saddle at the other end, which can be a significant factor in the feel of an archtop or electric). When you bend (actually, when you just fret as well, but to a much lesser extent), the string stretch gets distributed over the whole length of the string between its rigid mounts. Longer length, including the afterlength IF it can move over the nut or bridge, makes for a looser feel when bending. You can imagine two identical strings at the same tension, with one being longer. The longer one will be easier to displace when pushed sideways. The player will need to push it a little further to get the same pitch increase, but it has a looser feel. I learned this from reading an article about Jimmy D'Aquisto, who said he could make a guitar feel like it had lighter strings by adding afterlength at the bridge end. I saw a spreadsheet someone ran that showed the difference in bending feel between a long and short tailpiece as about equal to going up or down one thousandth in string gauge.
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Howard Klepper
http://www.klepperguitars.comWhen all else fails, clean the shop.