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I'm working on an old '30's-'40's Martin uke. Were they doing dovetails on those back then?

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I've got one, the neck block is a big square chunk with grain running across it perpendicular to the grain in the neck, so we can be pretty sure it isn't a spanish heel at least. Dangit, I don't have my Martin books set here, it's on loan, I'm sure someone else can look it up.

I noticed that as well which makes me think it may be a dovetail. I just don't want to start drilling an access hole before I know for sure.

FWIW, I worked on one from the teens that had a dovetail joint.

Found something that might help -

http://www.ukuleleunderground.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-70450.html

Scroll down, and the guy says that the Martin factory told him that they always used dovetails.

I love these things - my avatar is one that I got which had served time as a dog chew toy.

And now I gotta ask - why the heck do you need to remove the neck? What could possibly make this necessary? I'm dying to know! 

Thanks guys. It needs a serious neck reset.

Are you sure?  If the action is too high, I would be looking at the top plate checking to see that it was flat.  Often these old-time ukes develop a belly-up condition since there is so little bracing.  Flattening the top would be the first course of action.  But perhaps you've already checked that.

Top plate is fine, just the neck angle is bad. I've been trying to take it apart but it's a bitch. There's a crack on the body by the side of the neck and it's wobbly. Need to take it apart and fix it before re-gluing the neck.

It does have a dovetail but the end of the neck tenon is often tight up against the heel block mortise leaving no air space for a steam needle.

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Well that'll make it extra hard then!

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