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.Pure carnauba could be applied with heat instead of solvent, maybe an advantage.
If you are looking at coating materials for the balsa, you might check out water-base polyurethane. It tends to penetrate less than most other finishes.
If you want something that will penetrate and make the wood harder, there is a product called Wood Hardener, made by a company in the U.S., Minwax. It is formulated to penetrate old rotten wood and set up inside, making it much harder.
I think you may want to glue two thin sheets of balsa together, crossing the grain, so that they will reinforce each other, otherwise you will have a panel that is very flexible along the grain. I don't think you will get the results you want from balsa when it is used in large areas. For one thing, this honeycomb look of the grain is in the wrong direction to give the reinforcement you need. Hard to beat hexagons and triangles for strength, but they need to be perpendicular to the sheet, I think.
One of the problems with balsa is that it will damp out high frequencies like foam. Knock on a block of balsa and you will see what I mean.
Do you think it is possible make a sandwith with PE+balsa+PE??
Sandwiches with a damping balsa middle layer are common. But this is usually end grain balsa (fibers perpendicular to the plate surface). Concerning linearity / neutrality I would prefer aluminium or titanium as cover layers.
A big gray titanium naked or laminate plate could be great, except for the price.
Could be a hot candidate for laminating on titanium. BTW, what do these titanium sheets cost? Are they more expensive than aramide honeycomb?
Visaton say on their discussion-forum that pure metal sounds awful.