honza992 Posted April 25 Author Share Posted April 25 6 hours ago, Andyjr1515 said: It will be fine Thanks Andy, I love your opptimsm🙂 Let's hope it's ......founded. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 9 Author Share Posted May 9 (edited) Hi All Bit of a delay in posting. The front and back are now glued on and i've cut the binding channels. I forgot to take photos but I use a router and take many passes.... Next, a very simple end graft made out of two bits of binding stuck together. It's not glued yet, first is binding. There was then a slight delay as while I was cutting up some veneers for the binding I managed to slice my finger open. Turns out surgical scalpels are actually quite good at cutting humans..who'd have thought! A quick trip to A&E and a few sutures later, I'm fine. As usual, mistakes like that happen because I was hurrying. Sharp things and haste do not go together well. Being a numpty doesn't help of course. Anyway, the bindng channels I cut with a router, the side binding though is done by hand. First a gremel, then a chisel to clear out the channel. The binding gets bent on the iron the same as the sides. The binding layout I'm doing has got black/white inner lines that will be mitred to the lines of the back stripe. The most difficult part is here where they meet at the bottom: In the picture above it isn't glued. I'm trying to get those white and black inner lines to line up nicely so it looks like one continuous line. The black one is fine, but you can see that the white one still needs a bit more work. I glue everything together (bindng plus white and black veneers) all at the same time which is not the normal way of doing it. And next time I may well try doing the purfling lines first. The back is bound, so we'll see tomorrow how successful the mitres were. Edit - In case you're wondering, the two white strips on the left hand side are teflon. I slide them into the joint so that when I glue the binding on the right hand side it doesn't gum up the left hand channel. Dried titebond is difficult to get out of small gaps like that. Speaking of titebond I've gone back to using it for binding. For a while I used superglue, which seems easier because you can get everything completely ready and taped into place before wicking in water thin glue. What it doesn't do is soften the binding, so it's a quite unforgiving process. Because titebond is water based it seems to soften the binding allowing it to bend into the corners better. So for now I'm sticking (ooh nice pun) with Titebond (original). Though next time I may try fish glue which apparently has a longer open time. Binding can be pretty fiddly so being able to take it more slowly would be good.... Edited May 9 by honza992 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 22 Author Share Posted May 22 (edited) OK, the box is closed, so time to crack on with the neck. First up is working out the neck angle. I stick one of he sleeves of my spindle sander onto the guitar top at the position where the bridge will be. A straight edge and a digital level* gives the required neck angle as being 5.1 degrees. The sleeve is a bit higher than I need, so a quick bit of maths gives me a final neck angle of 4.2 degrees. Ne Next I glue up the heel block, with my usual excess of veneers.... Talking of veneers the other thing I've got to do is get a white and black line under the fretboard, so that they meet up with the lines underneath the headplate, like this: The fretboard is already radiused so it's not easy to clamp, so I need to use a vacuum bag. I use one of these skateboard vacuum bag things with a wine pump. I've used it a lot over the years and it is a brilliant bit of kit, perfect for guitars. And compared to a proper veneer pump and bag it's a bargain. Here's the fretboard in the bag, glued with epoxy. Next I need to cut the neck angle on to the end of the neck heel. This is a right old faff. Getting the Radial Arm Saw set up takes ages. I always do a test cut on a similar sized piece of scrap wood because you pretty much only get one chance. As you can see in the picture I ended up using a neck angle of 4.6 degrees, slightly different from my initial guess of 4.2. That's why I always do a test cut... Once that's cut, I've then got to fit the neck to the body. I'm happy that he angle is right, but I've also got to refine the left/right alignment. In other words the neck has got to be pointing exactly at the bridge. It doesn't. I stick the neck in the clamp, and rest the neck on the body. I put a thin strip of scrap wood into the trussrod channel so that it points down to where the bridge will be. I can see from that how I need to sand the base of the heel to get alignment. The sanding I do with a triangular strip of sandpaper, so it progressively sands one half of the heel. Hard to explain, but a picture may help: Rinse and repeat until the stick points straight down the middle of the guitar: (I know the top looks a mess. I put on a couple of layers of shellac just round the edge before binding. This helps pulling the binding tape off without getting tearout on the spruce top. It'll clean up nicely. I hope....) Edited May 22 by honza992 8 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RonC Posted May 23 Share Posted May 23 (edited) Great craftsmanship! looks very promising! Edited May 23 by RonC 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hellzero Posted May 23 Share Posted May 23 I'll say it again: amazing work, Sir! 👌👍👏 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andyjr1515 Posted May 24 Share Posted May 24 Yes - great stuff! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 28 Author Share Posted May 28 (edited) For the neck joint I will have a single screw holding the heel against the body, then the fret board extension will act a long horizontal tenon, held by a single bolt through the body. Sounds complicated, but isn't. It worked really well on the last build, it's completely stable and seems to be plenty strong enough. I rout the mortise for the fretboard extension/tenon in one go. A simple MDF jig with a locating strip of wood that slots into the truss rod channel. This makes sure everything lines up, and makes clamping a lot easier. I've already drilled the hole for the wood screw through the heel and into the neck block. Again, the screw helps with keep everything aligned while I rout. Here's the jig: Routing: Once the tongue/fretboard extension has been glue and sanded flat, it looks like this: The fretboard then goes on top. I haven't glued it at this point, still a few jobs to do first...... Edited May 28 by honza992 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mykesbass Posted May 28 Share Posted May 28 @honza992 that pinstripe on the fretboard is exquisite. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 29 Author Share Posted May 29 22 hours ago, Mykesbass said: @honza992 that pinstripe on the fretboard is exquisite. Thanks @Mykesbass The stripe continues through the nut and round the headstock😁 8 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 29 Author Share Posted May 29 Just to very quickly finish the neck joint description, I put a T nut onto the fretboard extension to hold it down. So a screw through the heel and bolt through the back. It's quite a lot to get all lined up and the neck pointing in the right direction. One of the biggest steps up from making electric to acoustics, is that with acoustics there's no flat surfaces. Everything is curved and nothing is in the same plane. 7 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mykesbass Posted May 29 Share Posted May 29 7 minutes ago, honza992 said: Thanks @Mykesbass The stripe continues through the nut and round the headstock😁 Now that's just showing off 😎 Fabulous work, I am full of admiration. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 30 Author Share Posted May 30 I think, I'm not sure, but I think this may be the last veneer of the build. So enjoy it..... 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted May 30 Author Share Posted May 30 Ah it's not. I've remembered there's more🤣 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpondonBassed Posted May 30 Share Posted May 30 11 minutes ago, honza992 said: A boil in the bag bass. Cool. That should make for some soft meaty notes. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andyjr1515 Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 On 28/05/2024 at 21:50, honza992 said: Here's the jig: Routing: Once the tongue/fretboard extension has been glue and sanded flat, it looks like this: What a clever way of getting that angle accurate! Consider the idea stolen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted June 1 Author Share Posted June 1 11 hours ago, Andyjr1515 said: What a clever way of getting that angle accurate! Consider the idea stolen I stole it from Gore, so steal away! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted June 7 Author Share Posted June 7 (edited) Neck Carve! I always cheat when it comes to neck carving. I start by carving a series of facets onto the neck. These are carefully measured and calculated. Once they're done there's still quite a lot of wood to take off, but they give the neck it's final shape. Here are the first two facets: Here I'm starting on the next one. The tape is there to remind me where the line is I'm supposed to be carving to. You really don't want to get carried away and go to far beyond the line. It's veeeery late in the day to start a new neck. And on dark wood a pencil line can be darn hard to see. I end up with.....ummmm...is it 8 facets, something like that. I spend quite a long time getting these pretty flat and consistent. I think it reduces the amount of 'shoe-shine' sanding which is needed, which is the god-awful final stage.... So here we are: VID_20240607_121041~3.mp4 If I can over the weekend I'll make a start on the headstock transition. Edit: Hmm...that video is masssssive! Does anyone know how to make it smaller? Edited June 7 by honza992 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted June 7 Author Share Posted June 7 (edited) Since you're all there, here's a few random photos. I realise I fretted without taking a single pic. So here's the all important preparation before fretting. I've learned the very very hard way to check every slot is deep enough before starting to fret. A bent over piece of fretwire with the tangs filed off is perfect. When I glued on the black/white veneer on to the bottom of the fretboard, some of the epoxy seeped through into the slots. Time to bring out the world's tiniest saw... Then side dots. With another of my fugly jigs. Honestly, there should be a law against it.... Edited June 7 by honza992 10 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Richard R Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 If you shot the video on a new iPhone then it defaults to a stupidly high resolution and 60fps frame rate. I think there is a settings change up in the top right where you can change the rate. Android will depend on the phone, but Samsung has an option under Advanced settings to use HEVC, which should reduce the size. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ezbass Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 10 hours ago, honza992 said: Then side dots. With another of my fugly jigs. Honestly, there should be a law against it.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andyjr1515 Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 11 hours ago, honza992 said: I always cheat when it comes to neck carving. I start by carving a series of facets onto the neck. These are carefully measured and calculated. There's nothing cheating about that! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Si600 Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 2 hours ago, Andyjr1515 said: There's nothing cheating about that! I thought that was how it was done! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted June 10 Author Share Posted June 10 On 08/06/2024 at 09:40, Richard R said: If you shot the video on a new iPhone then it defaults to a stupidly high resolution and 60fps frame rate. I think there is a settings change up in the top right where you can change the rate. Android will depend on the phone, but Samsung has an option under Advanced settings to use HEVC, which should reduce the size. OK I'll take a look. That enormous video is making me feel queasy.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted June 10 Author Share Posted June 10 (edited) On 08/06/2024 at 11:03, Andyjr1515 said: There's nothing cheating about that! On 08/06/2024 at 13:51, Si600 said: I thought that was how it was done! It feels like cheating. I feel as though I should be doing it freestyle, with only my keen luthier's eye and maybe a beret..... For some reason I thought most builders just sort of went for it, rather than the slightly over-engineered process that I go through. Either way, it's really a great technique. Not fool-proof, but probably as close as you can get with neck carving. Edited June 10 by honza992 1 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
honza992 Posted June 10 Author Share Posted June 10 (edited) Once the facets were done I then used a spokeshave, and sanding blocks to get the length of the neck more or less to its final shape. Today I started on the transition. I find it easier that way, taking the transition down to the neck, rather than doing the transition first. I can see the curves better for some reason. Here's the development of the headstock transition. I also made a quick start on the heel transition. Here it is unstarted..... One of the last jobs to do on the neck is drilling the holes for the tuners. (I'm pretty pleased with the walnut veneer on the back of the headstock 😁) Edited June 10 by honza992 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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