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Andyjr1515

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Everything posted by Andyjr1515

  1. Yes - but you probably won't have done the fingernail test. It is a very severe test, especially with some of the softer woods that are used in guitar/bass building as the finish has to be stronger than the underlying wood, otherwise it flexes, the wood underneath starts to deform and then the whisper-thin finish gives way.
  2. Yes - other than some two-pack products (need equipment and pro-level skill) or industrial processes (need an industrial estate and a small fortune) then most gloss finishing products - whether they are water-based, oil-based, wax-based or spirit-based - that are readily available need a good few weeks to fully harden. Some take months. Most of the products I use (haven't yet found a water-based that has been successful - but that's probably me and not the products), generally old-fashioned high-volatiles polyurethane varnish or the much more environmentally-friendly wax-based Osmo ranges, are handle-able within 24 hours and some can be polished up within a week, but the fingernail test is a tough one. Nitro-spray needs special health and safety precautions but is polishable quicker - not sure, though, how they fare with the fingernail test (and some - look up Gibson Sticky Necks on Google - never fully cure). Some of the finishes I use will never pass the fingernail test.
  3. Perfect. G&W are a good supplier. One of my 'not very interesting claims to fame' is that I wrote their 'How to Set Up the G&W Mitre/Fret Slotting Jig' guide for them .
  4. Just checked and David Dyke don't do Zebrano for fingerboards, but there are some decent timbers in their bass range. And yes - as stated here below - they still do a fret slotting service. It's well worth thinking about and I'm pretty sure it is not a large on-cost : https://luthierssupplies.co.uk/product-category/electric/electric-fingerboards Other suppliers are, of course, available
  5. That's a splendid looking bass! On the one hand, non-playable but nice looking builds make for a perfect wall hanging subjects (Ask me how I know ) On the other hand - yes, I'm sure that would be fixable both in terms of weight and fretboard. But yes, there's quite a bit of work involved. Just some thoughts from someone who's hacked, bashed, b******d and built most varieties of bass and guitar over the past few years: - don't worry too much about the Workmate. All of my early builds and mods were done with one, including at least two NoTreble 'Bass of the Week''s! But: yes, it slows everything down waiting for dry weather; cleaning up is a pain; it makes for a challenge if you are planing...the force of the plane tends to push the workmate round the garden rather than cutting neat curls of wood shaving. - You would be able to take a significant amount of weight out without affecting the on-the-strap balance as your front strap pin is very well placed. Over the knee, yes it might be a bit neck heavy - Reducing thickness of the body is by far the most effective way of reducing weight as long as your pickup chambers are shallow enough to allow. Your sticky out length of the through neck with the tuners will be 3lbs-ish. Your pickups, etc, prob 1.5lbs-ish - so your body wood is going to be around 5.5lbs. If it's, say 35mm thick and you are able to take 10mm off without bursting into the pickup chambers, you will lose 1.6lbs weight. Routing a chamber in the back of upper horn (which won't adversely impact on the balance) might take out another 0.4lbs - retro-chambering doesn't take out anywhere as much weight as you expect. But you then have an 8lb bass that still balances on the strap. - Fretboard-wise, yes you have a choice - and I think it's as broad as it's long. Personally, I would take the board off and start again with a new blank (if you bought the blank from David Dyke, pretty sure they still do a slotting service for not much at all). But that's maybe because I've removed fretboards a few times.
  6. The neck itself should be structurally fine with most reasonable changes of string tension and tuning. The thing that will be affected, however, is the neck relief and most major changes of either string gauge or tuning are improved by a check of the relief and, if necessary, a tweak of the trussrod. The string tension pulls the neck into a small 'bow-and-arrow' bow and the trussrod counteracts that by creating a back bow resulting in an 'almost straight'** neck - and so if you down-tune a bass previously properly set up in standard tuning, the string tension will be less and the neck will be pulled back by the truss rod, potentially into a back-bow. **'almost straight' because it is necessary to leave a teeny bit of bow-and-arrow bow (the relief) Shout if you need a simple ABC of checking and adjusting the neck relief.
  7. Yes - they were very nice indeed
  8. And a stunningly beautiful bass that was, too! Potentially, yes - if the adjuster was welded to the other end (or the two threaded blocks were fitted the other way round) then I reckon yes - if would operate in 'reverse'. All other things being equal, I can't think of any advantage in doing that, but there might be one. Anyone know?
  9. Well, guitar and bass builder, for what that's worth And here, I am talking 'conventional' single action or two-way truss rods. While there are some unconventional and custom trussrod approaches, nevertheless, sticking with the conventional types it is usual - and I've never personally come across any that are not - that 'standard' single-action truss rods are 'righty-tighty' (ie clockwise to increase the back-bow to counteract the string tension's bow and arrow bow. Here's what one looks like: The slot is curved, and the rod is also covered by a curved packer under the fretboard which bends the rod. When you tighten the rod, it tries to straighten which bends the neck in the direction required. To make it lefty-tighty, functionally it would work exactly the same but you would actually have to cut a left-handed thread...which is an unnecessary complication and potential confusion to the customer. That said, you can do no real harm with a conventional single action as, if you are turning it the wrong way, the nut will generally just come loose and unscrew off the rod. Two-way rods are different, though. From flat, turn the adjuster one way and it bends one way, turn it the other way and it bends the opposite way. So which way you have to turn the adjuster to create a back bow in the neck depends - not on which way round it is, but which way UP it is. To explain - here's a typical two-way trussrod...and an oft-repeated misleading feature in this photo from a well-respected supplier's web site illustrates the reason that some folks get it wrong. I'll come back to that How it works is that there are opposite screw threads each side of the rod. So if you turn the adjuster, the two screw blocks at each end and welded to the steel strip get closer together or further apart. And so the steel strip and rod have no option to bend either one way or the other, depending which way you turned the adjuster. Turning the adjuster clockwise looking at it from here will bend it one way (in reality, with the above one the two ends will lift off the table). But note that if this was a headstock access and we wanted to adjust it from the heel, then turning the whole thing round so the adjuster is at the other end, then turning the adjuster clockwise looking at it from the heel still bends the same way (above, the two ends still rise off the table). But if we turned the rod the other way UP - so that the steel strip is at the top then, as far as the neck is concerned it is bending the opposite way. And yes, folks - the above photo has it upside down. And most ads for truss rods DO show them the wrong way round - probably because it's easier to photo...and the marketing guys aren't usually the guitar builders. So, to summarise - which way up a conventional two-way rod is fitted will determine if righty-tighty reduces the relief or increases the relief. And, to come finally back to @basexperience 's question. And this is, of course, only my own personal view and experience: Why might you install a rod to 'lefty-tighty' rather than the more conventional 'righty-tighty' ? 1. Hobby Builders - by mistake. Either by assuming the marketing photos show the way up it should be fitted, or not understanding fully how the rod works, or just good old human error - for one of the intentional reasons below 2. Commercial Builders - Note that the adjuster in the photo is vertically offset. So when it is fitted correctly - with the steel strip at the top, the adjuster is low down in the access slot. In some designs, that gives a problem for Allen Key access. I am aware of some designs where they need to get that adjuster as high as possible and turning the bar the other way up will achieve that - Design error. Yes - no names, but I am aware of one company that unknowingly got it wrong...and suffered some understandable owner adjustment neck failures as a result - Manufacture error. Unlikely - as it would immediately show up on initial set-up - but, for the sake of even-handedness, yes, possible. There is, of course, no rule or law, or industry standard on this and so makers are free to do what they want. But I personally think going against the 'convention' without a decent reason is asking for trouble. At the very least it needs to be made very clear to customers and users of the difference and the potential damage likely from not following the recommended set up advice. Oh, and, it goes without saying that the warranty approach needs to be fair given the likely confusion, error and damage. Personal view...
  10. Yes - I would have suggested the Gear4music ones too.
  11. If you do decide to change them, pay particular attention to the dimensions - there is a HUGE variation with makers of sometimes the overall pickup dimensions and, more often, the lug positions and radii. There are even differences across Fender's own pickups... In my experience, it is more often that they don't fit than they do...which is a bit bizarre.
  12. That neck is going to look and feel gorgeous!
  13. If @Waddo Soqable's assumption is correct, then very much exactly what he says ^^^^^ Once you've got the neck off, if you have any doubts then post a photo on here and we can advise as necessary
  14. Hi, @Richard R As the above, the general rule is 'as many as possible!' In reality, I would typically use around 8 to 10. This was my last build, a guitar and so with a shorter fretboard and got away with the lower of that range: And as @Si600 correctly says, some form of radiussed caul is quite important. You need to protect the back of the neck too. I happen to have a number of radius blocks so I use those, but a piece of 15mm thick pine/deal from B&Q would do fine - just use a goose-neck scraper to scrape a small radius clearance to allow the caul to be acting on both sides of the fretboard - or add a couple of thin strips to the caul for the same effect. The deal is what I generally use to protect the back of the neck and again, I find it stays better where it needs to be if I've scraped a bit of a radius in it. Personally, yes, I use Tonetech because they are simple, decent quality and have a good range of lengths. I try to avoid the ones that some other outlets sell that have a sleeve over the adjuster - a sleeve isn't needed functionally, and it is a few mm wider which means taking even more material out of the neck!
  15. It doesn't need to be like for like (and personally I would generally recommend an open Switchcraft rather than an enclosed or barrel jack) but it does need to be a 'stereo' jack. The spare terminal of the stereo jack socket is used to connect the battery circuit when you plug the jack in. A stereo Switchcraft looks like this: You solder the black battery wire to the extra tab (which is attached to the shorter of the two springs), the 'hot' to the tab attached to the longer of the two springs and the earth to the tab attached to the socket centre. Then, when the jack is fully inserted, the signal is sent to the jack tip, the earth is connected to the jack shaft - and the battery earth is also connected to the jack shaft, switching the battery on.
  16. You are very kind... but there is a difference between an experienced amateur and a seasoned professional. As Ronnie Corbett would say, "I know my place!"
  17. And Jon Shuker is one of the best...
  18. Hi @Cadenclarkson If you search 'Trussrod nut' on ebay you will find a number of metric and imperial replacement nuts for less than a tenner. The metric ones (which I agree with @Bassassin is probably right for this one) seem to come in two sizes M6 (6mm diameter thread) or M5 (5mm). Go for the allen-key ones - easier to get more leverage...and do use the correct-size allen key.
  19. Not standard in terms of headstock shape or scale length, etc? If it is the former, then there are some fully useable and exceptionally cheap paddle-head necks around (we are talking 1/3 of the UK cost of the timber!). If so, shout and I can find you some links. If it's the latter, then yes, it's probably going to be needing a custom builder.
  20. I agree with @Hellzero here. It looks good to me
  21. I'm flattered, @Hellzero - thanks. Looks a relatively straightforward but interesting project, @cetera. Unfortunately, I'm fully committed at the moment and so can't throw my hat in the ring - but there are a number of talented folk round here that may be able to
  22. Thanks! Alex picked it up yesterday...he pretty much said the very same thing
  23. Hi @Dazed As you say above, I'm pretty sure the body dimensions for a Fender 4 and 5 are identical. That said, from a functional point of view, it actually doesn't matter anyway if what you are planning is to do the work to fit a 5-string neck...the body is really just a convenient way of holding the neck, the bridge, the pickups and controls in their correct places - beyond that, it can be pretty much any shape or size If you are planning to fit a 5 string neck, don't forget the pickup routs and bridge fittings will also need to be changed too to accommodate the 5 string pickups and bridge. If you go ahead, don't forget to show us the pics
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