I am doing some work on a 1975 Gibson Hummingbird that has had some rather poor repairs in the distant past. The current owner has had the guitar since the early 80's and all the work was done prior to this. The guitar needs a neck reset, bridge plate repair, and a new bridge. The current bridge is not original and was glued on in the wrong location, negatively affecting intonation and leaving a shadow of the original showing. It is also cracked all the way along its length.
I have removed the bridge using heat, spatulas, and tapping lightly. I worked as carefully as possible but the grain is rather damaged underneath. I removed three usable slivers from the underside of the bridge and reglued them back on. I suspect that most of the damage is due to poor removal of the original.
Two questions: What is the best way to fill/repair the grain damage short of inlaying a new thin piece of spruce over the entire area; and what is better in terms of gap filling ability for the gluing of the new replacement bridge, Tightbond or hot hide?
Thanks for any help.
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