I got this Fender Villager, late 60's 12 string with a bolt on neck. Owner, who bought new' said a 'friend' thought the screws in the plate on the bottom adjusted the neck, basically the screws were tightened to the point the neck block broke. 1. the head block shifted, causing it to cave in and break just below where the neck attaches. Several breaks in block, top & side where neck attaches. 2. the bolt/screw holes were 'drilled out' to allow replacing the neck, 3. cardboard and white glue were excessively used to 'fix' by the 'buddy', no clamping all breaks out of alignment. 4. Soundboard sticks out about 3/16ths in slot for neck. See results in pics. Sorry, pics are not so good.
From what I can figure there are 2 options.
1. Clean and re-glue the breaks in the neck block, re-glue the soundboard to neck block, straighten as much as possible. Shim and adjust the neck set for playability. The 3/16" shift of the neck block will be an issue for intonation. Customer will have to live with the 'Uglies'
2. The right way to fix this would be to remove the top, remove the neck block, re-glue and straighten, replace to and fix all the breaks. Costly for customer. Value is $3-400 from internet searches.
Anybody see a mess like this before? I'm planning to do #1. Any warnings, tips?
Jerry