Well, I got part of that post yesterday right! As soon as I put it up I thought I'd better check and make sure it was all correct. When I went to look up any experimental results the stuff I had was not much help. I had never actually done that particular experiment before, so...
I did four tests today on my 'corker' guitar. It has a rather large soundhole, and I've made restrictors for it, using foam core board and card stock, of various sizes. Thus I was able to try some things with a 'normal' soundhole size, plus one that had about 33% more area and one that had 17% less. I measured the response in the low range, from about 70 to 250 Hz, in three ways: an accellerometer on the top just behind the center of the bridge, a microphone inside the guitar down near the tailblock, and a microphone out in front, about two feet from the top in between the bridge and soundhole. The driver for all of these tests was the same: a 'stinger' clipped to the bridge over the 4th string, and driven by a computer generated sweep signal. I was also able to play and listen to it with different soundhole sizes, as I had a student in.
As I suspected, the larger the hole is the higher the sound pressure inside the box at the 'main air' frequency. Both the inside sound measurement and the accellerometer on the top gave stronger signals with the hole more open. That's the part I got right. However, the 'main air' pitch always goes up when the hole is made bigger, while the 'main top' pitch remains the same, at least for this range of hole sizes on this guitar. Going from the smallest hole, 71mm dia., to the largest, 89mm, raised the 'main air' pitch from 89.3Hz to 98.2, a couple of semitones, and the internal sound level jumped by 68% when the hole was enlarged. The top, however, moved with less amplitude at the 'main top' pitch when the hole was enlarged, with the accelerometer giving a signal that was 7% lower and the internal sound level being 19% lower at that frequency.
Out in front the measured sound level at the 'main top' frequency was only 4% lower with the smallest hole that it was with the largest. The 'main air' level dropped off by more than 50% with the smallest hole, though, so overall the sound level was much less, and the balance shifted strongly toward the mid-range top frequency peak as the hole was made smaller.
Not much of this came through in the percieved sound. I could hear very little difference when my student was playing between the largest and smallest hole diameter. When I played it myself the tone with the more open hole was preferable, although it was hard to pin down why. When I played it and the student watched he thought it sounded more 'distant' with the smaller hole, but when we did a blind test, with his back to me, his perception reversed. So much for that.
In the end, there simply was not much musically useable change made by enlarging the soundhole, at least on this guitar. Despite it's looks it's not a bad little box, with decent balance and tone. Perhaps a guitar that was more lacking in bass response would benefit more from enlarging the soundhole some. Unless the change in area was large I suspect there would not be a lot of difference percieved in the overall timbre, but the balance and clarity might both be enhanced. Again, there's really only one way to find out....
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