John Platko wrote:
It's very rare to find a description of tap tuning that can be understood at all, let alone accurately, by the person reading it.
Agreed John and this is admittedly one of the holes in the available information for aspiring guitar builders.
When I set out to begin to learn how to use tap tuning or more specifically in my case to learn to voice tops to assist me with voicing them I could not find information that I could understand anywhere. Then one day I PMed Lance and he helped me make a personal break through that got me started. The next step for me was getting a copy of John Mayes "Advanced Voicing" DVD and that went a very long way in helping me out further.
But most of all my own understanding and the methods that I use these days were gained by spending a lot of time bracing and attempting to voice tops and practice tops. I made 3 practice tops with inexpensive wood solely for the purpose of learning and this included exploring under bracing and learning where that fine line may be.......
Perhaps the reason why tap tuning or voicing is seemingly difficult to learn, although it need not be, is that it is as much of an art as it is a science. As such it needs to be experienced first hand, over and over again, and in short order the rings that you start to hear will start to make sense to you.
Attempting to understand voicing or tap tuning out of the context of actually experiencing it by doing is IMHO impossible.