Hello,
I need to repair a bridge pad on an otherwise near mint '63 Epiphone Caballero (as well as replace the plastic bridge, which goes without saying.) I've read in Dan Erlewine's guitar repair book, that a great way of doing this is to use a caul with Bondo smeared on it, waxed paper to separate, and clamp this down in the guitar. The idea being that the Bondo will form to the exact topography of the bridge pad top curvature making for a better fix.
OK, sounds great, but I can see the possibility of the Bondo squeezing out and sticking to something, giving me a one way ticket to Problemville.
Question: What about rare earth magnets? Could I use the magnets against, say a piece of framer's mat board (which is stiff but flexible) then the waxed paper, then do the super glue and sawdust trick? I'm thinking four or five magnets placed along the mat board caul would allow the caul to conform to the shape of things.
Good idea? Bad idea?
Ooooo, just thought of this, what about one of those stress balls (the cheap ones that are basically balloons with sand in them) and just clamping one of these in there with the mat board and waxed paper with turnbuckle clamps?
Thoughts?
Thanks! John
Tags: bridge, caul, magnets
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