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...The modal frequencies are determined by many factors, the primary ones being the material, size and shape of the soundboard, its thickness and grain direction, and also the material, dimensions, and placement of its ribs. Secondary factors include the characteristics of the rim or case to which the soundboard is attached. In general, the thicker the soundboard, the louder the piano but the less the duration of its tone. Soundboard design is often a compromise.
Jackman-There is a major fly in the ointment with using a musical instrument as a reproducer. Musical instruments all give their own colorations to sound, which is what makes them sound different from each other, and why one chooses one particular instrument over another. This is why, using steel strings, a piano does not sound like a guitar does not sound like a mandolin does not sound like a banjo, and why brass instruments made of the same materials all sound different from each other. The very purpose of them is to add a particular color to the sound they produce.This is the antithesis of a musical reproducer, which attempts to add as little of itself as possible, so that the sound coming out of it represents as closely as possible the sound that was recorded.The bridge on a guitar works in fundamentally the same way as one of these exciters does. It transfers the sound of the plucked string to the soundboard and resonant chamber of the guitar. Likewise the bridge on a piano soundboard. On a solid body guitar, you have Peter Frampton, who sang through the guitar. A fun thing to listen to, but it was not intended to sound like his voice. Most likely if you mount an exciter to a guitar the music will sound a lot like musical instruments played through a guitar, which could be weird indeed. And where you mount it will affect the sound a lot.This could be fun to experiment with, but I don't think the result will be a very close match to what you are feeding into it.On the other hand, NXT says that you can put advertising on the front of the panels, so I don't see why you could not do the same with these wither by painting or by mounting pictures/posters of your choice. Depending on how it's done, it may or may not affect the sound very much. If this is just for an office system to have fun with, it may not matter that much. I think you will have to look beyond this forum for thoughts on that, though. I have seen some pictures and suggestions elsewhere for this, but can't remember where.
....In this page, I saw interesting comments on the tradeoffs: Quote...The modal frequencies are determined by many factors, the primary ones being the material, size and shape of the soundboard, its thickness and grain direction, and also the material, dimensions, and placement of its ribs. Secondary factors include the characteristics of the rim or case to which the soundboard is attached. In general, the thicker the soundboard, the louder the piano but the less the duration of its tone. Soundboard design is often a compromise.