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Thin viscosity cyanoacrylate is about the only stuff I've had any success with, if I can saturate enough in there. That old dyed wood was a clear issue even before the Great War, and Gibson acknowledged it in their literature shortly after, when they went to the big triangular neck reinforcement.
Most of the time I count on the peg head and the dovetail body joint to help keep things together, along with the fingerboard, of course. Then soaking in as much CA as I can, I call it basically done.
Now, the peg head often is the source of the stress wanting to pull things apart, so I reinforce it with a solid insert - either a spline or a dowel, to resist the tendency to allow the spit to start downward.
Here are a couple of FRETS.COM articles on that reinforcement:
http://www.frets.com/FretsPages/Luthier/Technique/Structural/Broken...
http://www.frets.com/FretsPages/Luthier/Technique/Structural/Broken...
I realize this idea would be time consuming and maybe sacrilegious and devaluing, but how about replacing the stringer with a better wood?
Time consuming, and requiring destruction of peghead overlay/inlay, but a good solid fix, for sure. Personally, I HATE taking those dovetails apart. With the fingerboard off, you can rout for maple or reinforcement that can be glued deeply in the center of the neck, much like Gibson's late triangular insert.
I forgot about the headstock fascia. Ian's photo shows something too beautiful to sacrifice.
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