Mike_P wrote:
I notice in one of your pictures it appeared as if you were having some difficulty shaping the brace...being caused by using flatsawn orientation of the grain...
after having read up on this subject, this is probably the main reason vertical grain orientation is used...
strength of wood is variable and some people's testing indicates it's a flip of the coin as to which orientation is stiffer...
strength is actually a different subject, more along the lines of wood being constantly under stress (either in an airplane or a house)...e.g. ability to take the load(s) and not break...guitars really aren't that loaded per se...e.g. needing to use flatsawn spruce for spars on an airplane is not a consideration...guitars aren't subject to repeated high G force loads that might result in failure of the spar (read shattering along a grain line) in a performance stunt aircraft. point being, in an engineering capacity, one is worried about something yielding (bending and not returning to straightness)...
anyway, carve along and enjoy they comparative ease of using vertical grain orientation
Thanks for the info Mike, that's interesting ,are they still strong enough and can I still use them?
The one in the picture was one of the last ones and the others are rough shaped with a chisel and carved well apart from a few little hang ups
Would love not to start again
Cheers