Once I scribed the abalone diamonds, I removed them and, with bits donated by my dentist (!), chucked in my dremel, I hollowed out the cavities for them. Then I dropped a bit of superglue into the cavity and tapped the diamonds home using a wood tapping block. After the superglue dried, I sanded the fboard down flush.
I did the same with the plastic position markers for the side of the fingerboard.…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 31, 2009 at 9:46pm —
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Gluing the back to the sides/top assembly.
I made abalone shell diamonds to inlay on the fingerboard. Here they are laid out and temp cemented to scribe around prior to routing out the cavities for them.…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 25, 2009 at 9:30pm —
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Interested in building a charango? Well, I will not provide a perfect tutorial, but I can present some important steps in building a carved charango, starting with hollowing out a block of wood.
There are charangos made from just one solid block of wood, and there are others made of several pieces. Doing it in several pieces you'll have more control of warping and it's way less waste of precious natural resources, so it's the multi-piece charango I'll go for.
Here is a…
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Added by Markus Schmid on July 21, 2009 at 4:00am —
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Playing around with this demonstrated to me how a little change in one dimension effects a larger change in other dimensions. Newenglandluthiers.org has a webpage which helped me quantify the necessary adjustments. The previous post concludes with a photo showing the clearance at the bridge location of a straightedge placed on the centerline of the fingerboard. After adjusting the neck heel, this was the condition:
From 16/64 up to 29/64. Too…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 20, 2009 at 11:38pm —
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Hi Lads,
Tks to anybody's help in telling me ho to safely clean a stiky neck on a Fender Custom Shop's 66 Jazz Bass Closet,
without hurting or damaging the nitrocellulose lacquer finish. The bass is quite 2 years old, and I'd like to have the neck fast and not sticky....Any suggestion is welcome and much appreciated...Thanks so much. Fabio
Added by Fabio Bolasco on July 19, 2009 at 9:55am —
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Okay, the neck: I started with a neck partially shaped I "inherited" from a friend who passed away. I think it was from a kit, because it has the cute bump under the headstock, the shaft pretty much shaved to shape, a groove for a truss rod and a tenon at the unshaped heel.
I glued on the headstock veneer, trimmed it down and laid out and bored the holes for the machine heads,
I decided after some reading and thinking, to saw off the tenon and pursue a bolt-on neck ala the older…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 14, 2009 at 10:30pm —
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With the Luthiers Wall 1 sold out... and previous walls (Artisans, Boutique Builders, Original Custom) sold out... we've decided to make one more general builders wall available...
LUTHIERS WALL 2
• EXCLUSIVE: Only 40 blocks available
• Huge 250-pixel square blocks (62,500 pixels)
• Each block includes 16 Front Wall blocks at no cost
• First come, first served for top positions at…
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Added by Jeffrey D Brown on July 14, 2009 at 9:48am —
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I traced the outline of the top/sides assembly onto the dreadnought-shaped back I started with, and braced it with spruce strips. I'm using the Cumpiano book as a general guide, but also using wood from inventory, so inventory trumps book for this project when there is a conflict on size, species or other parameter.
I used a wet saw to mill the abalone, wearing a respirator and a fan while working outdoors when final-grinding it down on the…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 12, 2009 at 9:00pm —
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Added by Mark Riess on July 12, 2009 at 8:30pm —
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My side-bending set up is decidedly low-tech. I figured, the old guys managed to do it this way, it CAN be done, I'm gonna do it! Got a 2.5" pipe and a flange at Home Depot, threaded the pipe into the flange, sledge-hammered the open end ovally, slipped an old tin cup over the open end, clamped the flange edge in the vise, wired up the torch and flame on! Like I said earlier, the sides I'd come by had already been bent to a dreadnought pattern, so I had to unbend and rebend 'em to fit my mold…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 11, 2009 at 9:30pm —
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Added by Mark Riess on July 11, 2009 at 9:00pm —
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So the rosette came out well, and I turned my attention to cutting out the circular trough for it to sit in. I don't have a decent drill press or a 'fly-cutter' whatever....What I do have is a drywall circle cutter that I modified and used to successfully cut the channel. There's room for improvement, but it sufficiently filled the gap for now. The mistake I made, however, was using epoxy to glue the rosette into the channel. I should've used AR. The…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 11, 2009 at 7:00pm —
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I've started my first guitar. Actually, I started it over thirty odd years ago, but for one reason or another, I set it aside for a moment to accomplish some other things. Now, the time and opportunity have coalesced to bring this project farther along. I long ago and at various times have collected an assortment of woods, tools and know-how. The spruce top I joined first, back in the seventies. Some other parts came from a second-hand kit I picked up along the way, abandoned by it's first…
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Added by Mark Riess on July 11, 2009 at 4:00pm —
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Added by Donald A. Fortune on July 3, 2009 at 9:31am —
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