I've got an old Gibson SJ Deluxe in the shop. It's got a number of cracks on the soundboard which I'm repairing. But, the wood from one of the cracks from the soundhole is warped. You can see it in the pictures. My question to you guys is, "How would you flatten it back out so I can line it up to glue?" I'm thinking slow pressure over time with some form of humidity. But have any of you guys run into this before, and if so, how did you flatten the top back out?
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Jeff,
Try loosening the pickguard. I am pretty certain the pickgurad (and those guitars have a lot of pickguard) is causing the warp.
Joshua
Jeff. Your customer doesn't want the neck removed but how about just the fret board? While this would entail a whole new set or processes the neck would remain on the instrument and you'd have acess to repairing and flattening the table. But, in general, this might be one of those "I'll have to pass this repair up as you will not let me apply established and effective repair proceedures. As such it's warranteed until the shop door threshold!"
Rob
Not to speak with absolute certainty, but I would assume the pickguard is already warped from shrinkage, and that caused the crack. It is possble the pichguard is affixed directly to the wood (via solvent, like Martin) so you need to release the tension.I might try the hairdryer and a thin knife. Another possibility is you soften the glue (or whatever) under that edge of the pickguard, clamp everything in place and see if it stays close to where you want.
Joshua
I have had good luck over the years with using 2 metal plates to sandwich the warped piece, after some slight dampening of the wood. To one side (underside) adding some heat to the plate.. let set overnight. It may take a few times... it'll work. Gentle pressure at first, then each repeat increase the clamping pressure.
Hi Jeff.
Looking at your photos, it appears as if that neck has some real condition issues. The frets are poorly seated and it appears as if there's a slight twist to it. You ought to include a re-profiling of the FB and a re-fret job in your estimate. I admit that the perceived twist may be an optical illusion in the photos.
Gibson acoustics from that era are not good sounding guitars nor were they built well. They definitely are not sought after by collectors. If I were removing the WAY too big & thick pickguard, I'd use a little hairdryer heat and a flexible tapered spatula to lift it. A reasonable bit of tear out from the removal will not compromise or devalue the instrument.
Best of luck. You have your work cut-out for you.
I'd be leaving the neck in place, It will help give leverage to realign the crack plus heat to remove the fretboard may damage the plastic binding and pearliod inlays.
I'd try clamping it down as is with a caul with the pickguard in place, dampening the wood underneath is likely to make it curl up more.
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