The main culprit is tension. Most guitar strings are up to pitch at about 22 to 27 pounds of tension. If you assume an average tension of 25 pounds for each string, a 10 string steel guitar has 250 pounds of tension on the strings between the tuners and the changers. The force is transmitted into the body of the guitar at the changer and the nut. The typical string height above the body of the guitar is 1 1/2".
![Image](http://home.attbi.com/~kabolins/g1.gif)
You can think of the steel guitar in this configuration as a kind of bow. Because of the strength of the body, the bowing effect is not visible but is measurable with a deflection gauge. Using the bow paradigm, if you pull on the string (raise the pitch of the string with a pedal) the bow bends. This is the root cause of cabinet drop.
A novel idea occurred to me as I thought about this problem. Change the force. Instead of tension on the guitar body, make the force compression. How? Modify the changer and the nut. Instead of mounting these on the surface of the body, make the frame of the changer extend through the body and make the frame of the nut extend through the body as well. Attach tensioning rods between the nut and changer to counter the tension of the strings. Also attach tensioning rods between the nut and the tuner frame. The idea is to make the tension of the strings and the tensioning rods equal. So now the body is not in tension anymore rather it is in compression.
![Image](http://home.attbi.com/~kabolins/g2.gif)
If the tension of the top and bottom are equal the body of the guitar will be straight (provided it is strong enough to withstand the 500 pounds of compression). The force will be transmitted into the body evenly throughout the thickness of the guitar rather than on one side as is the case with current guitar designs.
I can see two major benefits of this approach. The first is the virtual elimination of cabinet drop making the guitar easier to tune and play. The second is increased sustain due to increased pressure on the body.<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Karlis Abolins on 27 June 2002 at 02:36 AM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Karlis Abolins on 27 June 2002 at 06:01 AM.]</p></FONT>