I'm rather in agreement with some of the other contributors - the "brand name" makers set the bar pretty low. So, for steel string guitars I aim for around twice as loud as a "good" guitar you'd pick up in a main street store, an alluring tone, whilst playing in tune and no dud notes, and doing that consistently. The apparent loudness relates quite well to monopole mobility and there's a few monopole mobility charts in the book covering a range of makers and models. I have a couple of Matons and a Gibson I use as references and anyone who visits, I ask them to bring their "best" guitar with them so that they have a comparison that they're used to. So, though I don't keep records on this, the difference is, shall we say, apparent.nnickusa wrote:Quick question Trevor. Have you done any emperical studies to determine whether the "average" player can tell the difference between your work and a decent guitar from, say Martin or Cole Clark? I'm not challenging the legitimacy of your work, which I acknowledge, but wonder HOW MUCh of a difference it would make to Joe Blow....
Classicals are another matter, because the best classicals have always been from small shops/custom builders, so the bar is a LOT higher and here you're at the mercy of the client's preferences. A Smallman and a Hauser are very different instruments with characteristic sounds and, really, at this level of guitar, there is no such thing as "better"; just preference. So it's important to understand what the sound differences are and to be able to relate that to the woodwork, which is really what the books are about. So ears are still very important, because a nice frequency response curve with the peaks in the "right" places means nothing if the guitar sounds like... well, you know.
So all the engineering stuff is just a means to an end, and comes from asking a very simple question: "Why do guitars sound like they do?".