Hi Everybody
Just joined up & have enjoyed reading some of the posts & discussions on this site. They are very informative. Well I'm finally putting time into an acoustic guitar project that I started, would you believe, 29 years ago. Sort of tells you I'm a little older than 29. It's a little unusual in that the back & sides are flamed red oak (very pretty) that I started w/ a Luthier from the Vancouver, Washington area in 1979. It also has a shorter body length (I call it my Mini Dreadnought). It has a Sitka Spruce top & Black Walnut binding w/ Purple Heart purfling.
Right now I have finished the body & am ready to tackle the tricky task of fitting the neck to body joint. (I've read FF's article on checking neck angle at Frets.com.) I'll be using a traditional dovetail, & I have no trouble w/ the setup for that, BUT my concerns are regarding the neck setback angle. Specifically, when you cut a cavity into the body that is square to the top & a neck tenon at an angle less than 90 degrees, you end up w/ a fingerboard tongue that climbs away from the top. For example, by my layout, w/ the base of the neck cut at an 89 degree angle there will be a 1/16" gap between the end of the fingerboard tongue & the top. Smaller angle, more gap. While I realize that I can close this gap w/ clamping pressure when gluing, won't this cause either a dipping of the fingerboard after the 14th fret, or a lifting of the top in the same area, or both? Am I missing something or is this corrected by normal tensioning of the strings? Other than the Taylor system, on a glue joint would you ever consider relieving the fingerboard into the top at this angle to accomodate? Lots of questions.