Topic: Guitars and the Damaging Effects of Temperature & Humidity Extremes.

An acoustic guitar is a remarkable piece of engineering. It is at the same time quite fragile, yet also remarkably strong. The entire structure is built around the need to produce a good sound while resisting the force of approx 180 pounds (800N) of tension exerted from the strings which are trying to pull the head of the guitar around toward the body. When this tension succeeds physics has won the battle and the guitar then ranges from difficult through to impossible to play. This can take a long time to occur, sometimes years, and we only start to notice when it’s getting too late to save the guitar. Only an expensive guitar is worth repairing (if it is repairable) and it will need an expert guitar repairer, usually at great cost.   

Extremes of temperature and humidity greatly aid nature in its quest to bend a guitar out of shape. The inside of an acoustic guitar is unsealed timber. Timber will absorb and release moisture according to the environment it lives in and the weather it is exposed to. Timber will swell a little when exposed to high temperature and it will shrink a little when exposed to cold temperature. Timber will also swell when exposed to high humidity and will shrink when exposed to low humidity. If you combine high temp with high humidity or low temperature and low humidity the results are compounded.

If a guitar has change in environment it will adjust to the change without a problem, it’s the repeated change in extremes that does the damage so it’s best to avoid extremes and repeated sudden changes of temperature and or humidity.  If your guitar lives in an air-conditioned environment then the guitar will have low moisture content, if you take it into and hot moist atmosphere will cause the timber to swell rapidly and if the guitar is then returned to the air-conditioned room it will then loose the moisture again causing the timber to shrink again. If you do the opposite will have the same effect except in the reverse order. Also, do not to leave your guitar in a closed car in the sun, as this can raise the temp of the guitar to extreme heights.

A lot is said about keeping your guitar in its case to keep the guitar more stable. I’m not sure of the worth of this thinking as 1. The guitar case would have to be quite air-tight for this to work and 2. I would be very concerned with putting a guitar that has a high humidity content into a guitar case as this would help lock the moisture in thereby greatly increasing the risk of mould developing inside the guitar. Timber and mould do not get along together at all.

Just be sensible and you will get a number of decades out of a quality guitar.

www.nofretguitarlessons.com.au

Re: Guitars and the Damaging Effects of Temperature & Humidity Extremes.

Last winter I kept my guitar in the car all day, went to band practice after work, pulled it out of the case and started playing it when it was still cold.  I was lucky in that the vibration only caused a crack in the finish which doesn't affect the sound, but the two inch crack is visable.  Learned that lesson the hard way!  Let your guitar warm up to room temprature...better yet, don't leave it in the car!

Re: Guitars and the Damaging Effects of Temperature & Humidity Extremes.

25Frankster wrote:

Last winter I kept my guitar in the car all day, went to band practice after work, pulled it out of the case and started playing it when it was still cold.  I was lucky in that the vibration only caused a crack in the finish which doesn't affect the sound, but the two inch crack is visable.  Learned that lesson the hard way!  Let your guitar warm up to room temprature...better yet, don't leave it in the car!

Ouch!! I heard a rumor about that waaaaaaaaaay back when I started playing seriously last october.
I didn't treat my yamaha guitar too well, but when I got my Les Paul I changed real quick. I take the guitar everywhere with me. I even take it into restaurants if I'm going inside for any time longer than 15 minutes and It's very hot or very cold out.

So far, Reon (My silverburst LP) and I have made it through one summer and with the winter approaching I will have to be just as careful.

By the way...I fried the battery on my Laptop by leaving it in the car in my bookbag in the dead of winter for 4 hours. Then when I got home I plugged it in and ZAP...the battery was toasted. Now it won't hold a charge at all and I can only use it if I plug it into the wall. I'll get a replacement battery for it eventually...


=]
Dm

"Talent instantly recognizes genius,
but mediocrity knows nothing more than itself."

-Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle

Re: Guitars and the Damaging Effects of Temperature & Humidity Extremes.

The only reason wood is used to make instruments is that it grows on trees so it is relatively abundant.  Wood as a building material for precision devices (such as musical instruments) has many inherent disadvantages.

As mentioned above, it is prone to shrink, expand, warp, and decay with changes of temp and humidity.  Also, it is not consistent in it's density - minute differences in grain can greatly affect strength and quality.

I believe the real future of instrument design and manufacturing (not just guitars, but also other strings, brass, and woodwind instruments) lies in using materials that are stronger, more consistent, and more stable than wood.  For instance, graphite composites offer great advantages - they are extremely strong, lightweight, and unaffected by humidity and temperature.

One company currently using this material for guitars is Rainsong.
http://www.rainsong.com/
I would hope that other instrument builders would follow their lead, think creatively, and begin to explore graphite and other materials.

Ultimately, an instrument is just a device that helps to create sound vibrations - personally, I am far more interested in the sound it creates than in the instrument itself.  Ultimatley, an instrument is just a tool to make sound.

My suspicion is that with more research and development, graphite (or something similar) can be used to create violins that sound better than Stradivarius's, guitars and mandolins and ukuleles (etc) that sound better than anything currently available, and super high performance wind instruments.

"That darn Pythagorean Comma thing keeps messing me up!"
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagorean_comma[/url]

Re: Guitars and the Damaging Effects of Temperature & Humidity Extremes.

WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THAT LITTLE WOODEN CONSTRUCTION, TO LIFT UP THE TOP OF YOUR GUITAR?
Are there other people familiar repairing guitar tops?

[color=blue]- GITAARDOCPHIL SAIS: TO CONQUER DEAD, YOU HAVE TO DIE[/color]   AND [color=blue] we are born to die[/color]
- MY GUITAR PLAYS EVERY STYLE = BLUES, ROCK, METAL, so I NEED TO LEARN HOW TO PLAY IT.
[color=blue]Civilization began the first time an angry person cast a word instead of a rock.[/color]