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Is the bridge wood, ebony, or a composite?
What ever the manufacturer used looks a bit like it might not have worked very well... It will be interesting to know what they used if you find out.
I found this video on line and it's interesting: CA Guitars
Although I didn't catch the bridge installation they are using epoxy to assemble plates, etc. One of the reasons that back in the day HHG was used in some instances for everything is that they only needed one glue. Speculating here but even though we see CNC machines, composite materials, stainless steel frets, etc. - lots of technology... It's still possible that the glue of choice for most every thing on these instruments is epoxy.
Oh the horror...... ;)
Ian if you find out from CA please let us know, inquiring minds want to know. Thanks.
The bridge is composite. The only wood on this particular guitar is the ebony fingerboard. The newer CAs don't even have that. Their fingerboards are made out of (in their own words) "a proprietary composite material similar to what the black graphtech nuts are made of".
We were going to see if Peavy would cover this repair under warranty, but apparently Peavy has previously stated that they're not honoring warranties from before they bought CA.
I am thinking it will be crazyglue...
Epoxy is used to attach the fretboard to the neck in the video. My money's on it being used for the bridge too but I would have a talk with the factory before going further. I too would like to hear what they recommend and what you do as far as prep.
I have a few friends touring with these and they are bulletproof as far as temperature extremes, humidity and rough treatment in the case. Hearing the women talk in the video makes me miss Lafayette and Acadiana. It's Crawfish time!
Ian,
I havn't done this particular repair but I glue up graphite fibre each and everyday with epoxy (I use West Systems 105/106) and don't have any drama providing everything is measured very accurately, temperature is controlled and the materials are prepared as per the tech sheets. I looked up high performance epoxies for shear and peel applications and the epoxy product (attached) seemed to fit the bill fairly well. They stick airplanes together with this stuff and its branded/origin quality assured.
You can bet its expensive but so is doing the job twice and pricing your reputation for failure.
I would use this if this job came my way.
Rusty.
First, I AM NOT OFFERING A SUGGESTION FOR THIS GUITAR.
But, as stated, the weakness of CA glue is how brittle it is. What about rubberized CA glue? It's a bit more flexible, and seems to be in the realm of possibilities for this repair, although I'm sure a quality epoxy would be preferred.
Ah, that is good reasoning. Thanks.
Hi David,
Agree with all, I use West Systems myself which is designed to lay-up laminates and similar boat building stuff , I noted the Loctite Epoxy because it was specific in its application for high shear and peel applications and had a prefilled makeup to account for irregular surfaces. I'm not familiar with it other than to know Loctite as a quality brand from my previous experience with the Aerospace Industry and what I wanted to advise was a quality product with a guaranteed performance which suited the particular purpose described here.
We are all going to see an increase in composite and hybrid material used in guitar construction and I suspect that we will end up knowing more about the repair requirements and schedules (due experience, trial and error) than the original manufacturers.
Regards, Rusty.
Hard to tell in the photo, but the residue left over does look like CA glue.
I'll contact Gougeon Brothers, and I'll let you know what they say. Epoxy sounds like the way to go.
Thanks!
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