Generally speaking, the bigger the plate the thicker it has to be. The limiting factor is the stiffness; how much it will flex under load. The main factors will be string type, string tenson, the height of the saddle above the top, and the span of the top.
Classicals will have less tension string steels, and 12-strings have the most. I think the difference in tension between 'lights' and 'heavies' amounts to about 50%, which is a lot, but less than the difference between nylon and steel. Those skinny strings in thr 12-string set are pretty close to their braking point, and carry a lot of tension: the total load is just about double that on a 6-string, I think.
At a given span, the stiffness of the top will vary as the cube of the thickness. Thus adding 10% to the thickness makes the plate about 30% stiffer, and making it about 25% thicker doubles the stiffness.
I'm trying to remember the formula for the deflection of a beam: I think the deflection under a given load goes as the fourth power of the span: twice the span, 16 times the deflection. Don't take that as gospel, though!
Bridge torque is what kills guitars. The taller the bridge the more the torque, and the stiffer the top wil have to be to handle that load over the long term.
I'm talking here as if there was no bracing on the top. Obviously, there will be,. However, my experience suggests that I get the best sound when the top and the bracaing are more or less in balance,in some sense, so I don't like thin tops with heavy bracing. Maybe that works better for you.
The upshot, then, is that you do have to make the top thicker if you make it wider or longer. In fact, the added thickness goes up faster than the added span: if you make the top 10% wider, you will probably have to make the top more than 10% thicker. Small guitars can have amazingly thin tops, and this helps make them louder than you'd expect. By the same token, making a guitar much bigger doesn't always make it alot louder, since you have to beef it up so much to avoid self-destruction.
I loaned out my copy of Hurd's 'Left Brain Lutherie', which has a lot of info on all of this. There was also an article in 'American Lutherie' a few years back on how to figure the scaling factors.
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