harryhaller,
The static stiffness of any structure depends on how and where it is supported. i.e. it is a property of both the struture AND its constraints. Put two pencils on a table 29 cm apart and parallel to each other and balance a 30 cm plastic ruler on them
Now press on the centre of the ruler with your finger. You can deform the ruler easily. The centre of the ruler has a LOW STATIC STIFFNESS.
Now, move the pencils half way to the centre of the ruler.
Now when you press on the centre of the ruler with the same force it doesn't move as much as before. Its static stiffness has increased.
Finally, bring the pencils to the centre
Now when you press on the centre of the ruler it doesn't really move at all because you are effectively pressing directly on the pencils. The static stiffness of the centre of the ruler is VERY HIGH
The ruler is the same in each case. Type and mechanism of support is the same in each case. Only the position of the supports (constraints) has changed.
Conclusion 1: The static stiffness of a structure depends on the position of its constraints.
It doesn't matter how you measure the static stiffness. You can put weights on it and measure the deflection with a dial gauge; you can extrapolate to zero frequency from a modal analysis. The conclusion still holds.
A second thought experiment
Hang the ruler by its ends using something very stiff (thick wire for example).
When you press on the centre of the ruler and measure its deflection you find that the static stiffness is quite high and also the ruler bends quite a lot. Now replace the wire with something less stiff, e.g. bungee cords. Press on the centre with the same force as before and you will find the displacement is much greater AND the ruler doesn't bend as much as it does before. Now replace the bungee cords with thin elastic bands. Now when you press on the centre, it deflects quite a long way BUT THE RULER HARDLY BENDS AT ALL.
Finally take this to the extreme and suspend the ruler on imaginay elastic bands with zero stiffness (idealised free-free boundary conditions). Now when you apply force to the centre of the ruler it displaces an infinite amount and what is more, the ruler doesn't bend at all. It moves as a RIGID BODY.
Conclusion 2: The static stiffness of a structure depends on the stiffness of its supports. When the stiffness of the supports is very low any static stiffness you measure will effectivly be the static stiffness of the supports not the test structure.
Conclusion 3: The static stiffness of an unconstrained (free-free) structure is undefined.
Conclusion 4: As the supports tend to the free-free condition, the relative static displacements between various parts of the structure become smaller and smaller and so any information about the stiffness distribution becomes harder and harder to measure.
Back to the stringed instrument.
You can't measure the static stiffness with ideal free-free boundary conditions because the static stiffness does not exist under those conditions. You can't measure the static stiffness using pseudo free-free boundary conditions (eg hang it on elastic bands) because what you will measure will be mostly the static stiffness of the elastic bands. The only way to ensure the static stiffness that you measure is due to the structure and not the supports is to make the supports very stiff indeed (like Greg says, "bolt it to a concrete wall"). Unfortunately you probably don't want to do that to your instrument and also those boundary conditions are not really representitative of what happens when you actually play the instrument.
Oh, by the way the behaviour at zero Hz depends on stiffness only. The mass has no effect so you don't get any information about the mass.
Sorry to be so gloomy.
M
--
Dr Michael F Platten