Andy Birko wrote:
So, I consulted with two structural engineers who are a lot closer to this sort of thing than I am and here's the results:
If the Bridge & Saddle were perfectly rigid, it would not matter where the bridge pin holes were located, the top would "see" the torque in the same way. i.e. the top wouldn't know where the string was anchored, it would only "know" the height of the saddle.
Because the bridge is not perfectly rigid, this complicates things and the "pivot point" of the torque may move depending on bridge pin location. The torque on the top doesn't change, just to location of the moment changes. This effect will be bigger or smaller depending on the rigidity of the bridge.
None of this says anything about how this could affect tone though as I mentioned, even if the torque doesn't change, the downforce on the saddle changes which could do things.
Hi all,
I thought before this thread dies I'd thank everyone for their responses. I've been following them intently, studying and pondering. I see the issue is a lot more involved then I bargained for, but the discussion has, if not provided a definitive answer, made me much more informed of the factors involved. Right or wrong, it has helped me develop a mental model as to how I think the bridge and saddle function, that I will use going forward. As my small contribution, I'll share a somewhat crude experiment I did to demonstrate to myself the principles being discussed.
I mounted a 6" long board on a pivot above my work bench , sort of like a see-saw, then added a 1 1/2" block at one end of it. This was my surrogate bridge and saddle ( colored grey in my diagram). Strung a line with just under 30 lbs of weight over an improvised roller, and measured the downward force on the front of my "bridge" with a dowel and bathroom scale. I took measurements with a steep break angle of about 55 deg. and a shallow break angle of about 20 deg (measured off my 6" board). Both ways , my bathroom scale read 18 lbs. I repeated it all a few times with the same results.
Attachment:
Bridge test.jpg
Bridge test.jpg [ 17.13 KiB | Viewed 5 times ]
I think I'll let everyone draw their own conclusion as to the results, merit and faults of this. I think what it most proves is that I need to get a life!
Gerard
Wonderful experiment Gerry. My opinion: point of rotation is irrelevant if held constant. (Engineering is one of many fields that I don't have a degree in.)
Andy: I'm sorry we haven't heard from you. I think you had it nailed.
I think saddle position relative to front edge of bridge has some effect. I think bridge pin position is irrelevant. I think steel string bridges are "rigid" compared to the soundboards they interact with. I think the "rigidity" of classical bridges is debatable. I think data is fundamentally important, and physics is a prerequisite to interpreting data.