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Published Online: 11 February 2020
Accepted: January 2020
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 147, 998 (2020); https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0000723
The vibrational properties of green spruce wood samples were measured intermittently during drying and subsequent conditioning under ambient conditions to clarify the effects of seasoning. After drying, the equilibration of mass and the sound velocity of wood continued to increase, and its internal friction significantly decreased during six months of seasoning. However, those seasoning effects disappeared once the wood was moistened at 100% RH. Physical aging and stress relaxation of wood polymers was assumed to be responsible for this effect. This coincides with the empirical knowledge of violin makers: seasoning for a few years is more important than long-term aging over centuries.
We are grateful to artisans and companies, David van Edwards, Eric Blot, Jr., Elisa Scrollavezza, Andrea Zanre, Kohno Guitar Manufacturing Co., and Aoyama Harp Co. for their kind donation of precious aged lumber. We also thank Dr. Sandie Leconte, Institut National du Patrimoine, for providing aged wood samples.
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