Ah, guilt! What a wonderful thing!
Rod, indeed this is my first Baritone and it is for me.
JJ, the design is inspired by the 'Kool-Aid' man. Remember, there were some highly sensitive and secret pictures leaked a while back on this forum? At any rate, I liked the idea of having something other than two parrallel tone bars under the bridge plate. She's a big bodied guitar (16.125 lower bout) and she's a full 5 inches deep. A big girl. I figured that the big strings and the long scale would take care of the bass side of things, but I wanted to make sure there was no 'mudiness' so I opted for this bracing pattern which should give me plenty of mid and trebles. Those braces, although high, are very thin. The top is around .105.
Hesh, if I added another X, I might have found myself in court for copying someone elses plans outright! Ha!
jf, there was a discussion here a while back about how, in the olden days, that the luthiers at Martin didn't spend much of their time cleaning up the insides of guitars. They'd leave scratch marks, glue squeeze out and you'd also see plenty of saw marks... It was Mario Proulx who had said something to the effect that having a rough inside provides you with more 'surface' and that this probably helped with the depth and warmth of the tone... And when you start thinking about it, it makes sense. Sure, if the guitar is ultra slick inside, the sound will reflect very easily, giving you a bright tone, but if it's a bit rougher, I like to think you'll get a smoother, warmer tone...
Then there's always the fact that these golden age guitars are over 60-70 years old and have time and use on their side...