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Am I seeing this correctly ... the wing of the bridge is concave?
I think you might have more luck with continuous heat, like a silicon heating blanket set to 250°f.
I think you can wick some #10 SM superglue into that crack after flexing it open. Might want to do it from the bottom to keep glue out of the saddle slot. Keep a q-tip and acetone handy in case.
Hi Andrew,
It's a policy issue: the bridge was probably not able to be saved because of the bad set it had taken. Appropriate methods of repair failed to correct the problem and a last ditch effort to save the bridge resulted in damage. However, the bridge was cactus anyway so it was going in the bin if it didn't respond. You did not make a mistake here so do not "eat" someone else's problem.
A motor mechanic would not do work for free if he found the loose fanbelt he quoted for was actually a broken crankshaft. If you do charity work for your customers they will expect charity work in the future, which doesn't pay the bills.
So the customer should be advised of the situation and billed for the manufacture of a new bridge.
Both Professionals and tradesmen do not assume responsibility for an existing problem that cannot be fixed by normal process. It is the customers responsibility to accept unforeseen problems that are pre-existant, regardless of a quote or indication made beforehand.
Rusty.
Andrew, I think I would bail on the bridge because the crack goes into the saddle slot and it's off the guitar anyway. I don't like the boil method because of all the water that must be removed before re-gluing and I never had much luck with it.
In the future a method that has worked for me is a 1/2" thick piece of aluminum that I shaped in a 25' hollow form so it is domed. I heat the aluminum up to 350 degrees on a hot plate. wet the bridge with a sponge and clamp. The aluminum cauls on the wings have cork on the bottom and the wood block is arched so it puts pressure on the outside edges. You can feel the wood softening as you clamp so you won't crack it. It's like bending a side and it's fast. unclamp in a few hours. When I made the first domed caul I figured I would make a more arched one in a 15' hollow form if 25' wasn't enough. I've never needed to.
If the guitar is local (to you) why not contact the maker for a new bridge? He/She is probably tooled up to turn out parts more easily than you doing a one-off.
I bring the pressure down over maybe 30 seconds depending on how warped it is. Once it's down making contact there's no need for more pressure. The rigid set up allows you to feel how much resistance there is. The heat really softens it. It's a little exciting when the moist bridge hits the aluminum for just a few seconds. It can kind of sizzle around but it quickly pulls the heat out of the block.
I actually like the challenge of making replica bridges. It hones the eye and hand skills.
I'm using the same method as David to flatten bridges, works quite well. If you have a local machine shop, it would be a good source for some Aluminum scrap. I have been using mostly 3/4" stock but keep 1/2" around for this or that as well. Cuts easily in my band saw and is useful other heating applications too. I have a D93 Martin in for a lifting/warped bridge R&R and took these images a few days ago. (*beware if you work on one of these, it's a Poly finish!)
Same as David, I wet the bridge and clamp it onto the Aluminum that has been heated to 350 degrees and let it sit until cold. The 3/4" thickness shown holds the heat longer than a thinner stock but obviously 1/2" is working just fine for David. 1/4" cork contact cemented onto plywood makes great clamping pads. I'll lay up a few square feet of it and then cut out pieces as needed.
I have made heater cauls out of Aluminum for bridges, bridge plates, finger board extensions, heal caps and just about anything else where you might use a heating blanket. Unlike the heater blanket, these heaters are indestructible. A hot plate, one of these little thermometers pictured and some Aluminum scrap and you're in business.
Good luck with the bridge re-do, that really is your best recourse as the others have mentioned.
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