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Posted: 2/2/2022 8:07:44 AM EST
[Last Edit: Czechers]
Post your builds, upgrades, and repairs here including kits and partscasters!
A few old threads and pics to get this party started, but please repost some of your prior work if you feel so inclined since this will be tacked! Attached File https://www.ar15.com/forums/General/Guitar-build-update--Finally-Finished/148-2477393/ https://www.ar15.com/forums/General/-ARCHIVED-THREAD-OK-I-guess-I-m-building-a-guitar-NOW-A-GENERAL-GUITAR-BUILD-THREAD-/148-2347906/?page=6 Attached File https://www.ar15.com/forums/General/Building-a-Junkyard-Dog-er-Pig-/148-2505443/ Parts Resources: AmplifiedParts.com: I found this site has reasonably priced components and is a source for quality inexpensive guitar pickups like Gotoh, Gretsch, and Kent Armstrong. Output jacks, capacitors, knobs and luthier tools. Licensed Fender necks under $150, and even wear parts and other components for Bigsby tremolos. Information: Dan Erlewine's videos on Stew Mac's YT channel: Dan's tips on StewMac YouTube channel (IM to add any resources to the list) |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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My latest work...tore down the PT Fastback to lighten it and add locking tuners. Word of advice, tape up your Bigsby pretty good if leaving it on. I didn't realize I dumped the washer that goes under the spring into the sawdust pile until the trash truck was driving away with my bag of shavings... Going to try with the arm lower for now. Just used a 1" and 1.5" forstner bit in a benchtop drill press.
My washer is somewhere in here: Attached File Attached File Attached File Polished my damaged frets out while I was screwing everything else up.. Attached File Innards of a Schecter PT Fastback IIB for anyone interested. G&B pickups unsurprisingly: Attached File Overall, the lightening project yielded noticeable results but someone forgot to weigh it before reassembly to see the actual difference before/after . I found out it really isn't the body wood, but the combination of th heaviest possible hardware and electronics you could put on a Tele so the gains in removing wood are minimal. I am going to do this with my cheap Tele with traditional bridge and pickups which will show more gains I'm sure. Attached File The board is really a nice piece of rosewood, especially after some lemon oil. Attached File |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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The Grover locking tuners are pretty stealthy. The cases are identical to the standard Grovers.they replaced, so no new holes. They lock as you turn the peghead to tighten the string.
Attached File Attached File I tried to install a Butchie Bar on the Bigsby, which seemed like a good alternative to the fugly Vibramate Spoiler, but even though I ordered the Metric version for Licensed Bigsby's, the pins didn't line up. Company said they are sending me something that might work. It is a nicely machined product with good plating. Will update when I have a unit that fits.. Attached File |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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IN!
The Tele relic build: I love the reliced Indio (original thread) so much I bought a tele from them to do the same sort of thing to. Here's the as received pic. And after today's abuse. It has a set of Danish Pete's DP51T pups coming and an upgraded switch plate already here. Also a cream-colored single ply guard inbound. Originally Posted By Czechers: That's an awesome level of distressing. Care to share your method since poly is really difficult to create this with (allegedly)? I still have my brownburst Korean plywood tele that's screaming for either some steel wool or for some other finish mod and the poly on that byatch is thicker than Jessica Simpson. View Quote Thanks! Sure, I use a flat/rounded medium-coarse rasp, a 1/4" wide chisel, and a leather skiving tool. A little preview of the re-finished neck there. Oh, and a hammer. Find a pic of the level of distressing you want. My first step was to mark a line all around the neck where it joins the body so I can mask that part off and NOT accidentally add or remove material there causing fit issues on re-assembly. Then take off the neck. I then put the pickguard (minus pickups), the bridge (minus all its gear), and the output jack back on the guitar, eyeballed the angle that strumming would occur, and used 0000 steel wool to remove the shine from anywhere I figured 40 years of play would hit. This leaves some shiny areas near the components and a decent-sized area between the bridge and the bottom with 'some' shine left. Same thing on the back. I left the ferrules in when steel wooling in that area. I did add a buckle-wound. On the edges you just have to think about where it would get touched a lot vs not and only SW the touched areas. OK, on to making more serious damage. Take all the hardware off. Take note of the shiny areas. No distressing should take place in these areas as they are protected by the hardware. It wouldn't make sense. Time for some practice, so go to the area normally covered by the pickguard and...start gouging with the chisel. On this guitar, the colored poly is thinner and it flakes pretty easily. On the previous one it seemed more pliable. I found the chisel worked best at an angle of about 20 degrees. Work away from previous wounds, or you might accidentally end up connecting two you didn't mean to. AMHIK. Try using the hammer (again, test in the pickguard area first) to make circular cracks. I added some on the bottom of the rear swell and at the back near the rear strap button. I think I am going to intentionally rip out the rear strap button and relocate it as that seems like a likely failure. I also add wear to the pickguard (not here yet) and the bridge and output jack. I cheat here and use my 2x72 belt grinder with a polishing belt to burn through the nickel plating in areas that would happen on those parts. Folks also use acid to age these parts. I tried that and didn't like the results. 'Vintaged' metal bits can be bought online if you like. I hand-sanded the back of the neck with 150 grit to get rid of the poly coating. It's not very thick. You can tell you are through it when you put a drop of water on the surface and it gets absorbed. The head faces I did on the sander. I am not happy with how I re-shaped this head...it looks goofy, and I am not sure it will work with my hanging hooks, but there's nothing for it now. The neck is done and coated in 6+ coats of matte clear coat. And here's the head with my custom decal... I can't decide on a pickguard color. The fam overwhelmingly likes tortoise. Several options inbound. It's done...and I love how it looks and plays. $80 open box tele from monoprice. $10 musiclily pickguard $25 musiclily locking tuners $5 musiclily rolling string Trees $225 Monty's Danish Pete Honoré Signature DP51T Telecaster Pickup Set $20 Monty's Montypresso Original Guitar Relic Wax - Tin (I was very impressed with this stuff, though I think it is likely just dark kiwi-wax) Various sandpaper and paint from home despot. $365 total. I made a bone nut and really spent some time getting the action where I wanted it on this build and I think it paid off. I was so happy with it I went back and re-did the action on the previous relic to match this one. Is the above what the OP intended? |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Tattoo'd and Voted #1 in blind taste tests.
TX, USA
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Tagaroo!
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(_@___]]~~ It is better to smoke here, than here after. Grab a cigar.
http://www.marinebattleherk.com |
This was a great idea Czechers
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Nothing cool ever happens to me
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Originally Posted By MikeS369: Working on this. Never done wiring before but am going to give it a try. Warmoth mahogany body, mahogany neck with ebony fretboard. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/59131/War2-2264942.jpg https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/59131/War1-2264941.jpg View Quote A setup like that is a good first wiring project to go with for guitar electronics. Have you soldered any electronics before or new to that? By the way, very nice guitar you have going. |
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I have a few partscasters and a Firebird I put back together but they aren't anything special. I can dig out the few pics I took while assembling them and put the specs up if anyone wants to look. They are not anywhere near as cool as the other projects done on here but they make noise so I think they were a success.
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Originally Posted By MikeS369: Working on this. Never done wiring before but am going to give it a try. Warmoth mahogany body, mahogany neck with ebony fretboard. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/59131/War2-2264942.jpg https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/59131/War1-2264941.jpg View Quote What's the nut width on that neck? It looks wide. That is one reason I am considering a Warmoth neck, they have some very wide options. |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Originally Posted By SirPsycho: A setup like that is a good first wiring project to go with for guitar electronics. Have you soldered any electronics before or new to that? By the way, very nice guitar you have going. View Quote Very minimal soldering experience and that was quite some time ago. I will do some soldering practice before working on the pickups. The nut width is 1 11/16" (43mm) not my favorite nut width. Neck has the standard thin profile with a straight 14 degree fingerboard radius. I prefer flat radiused fingerboards anywhere from 14-17 degrees. I don't like compound radius. |
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Originally Posted By MikeS369: Very minimal soldering experience and that was quite some time ago. I will do some soldering practice before working on the pickups. The nut width is 1 11/16" (43mm) not my favorite nut width. Neck has the standard thin profile with a straight 14 degree fingerboard radius. I prefer flat radiused fingerboards anywhere from 14-17 degrees. I don't like compound radius. View Quote Looks wider...huh. On soldering, the main trick is to keep the tip clean. So, get it up to temp, wipe with moist sponge, apply a small drop of solder to the tip, press that solder to the object being soldered, add enough solder to soak all connections necessary, then CLEAN THE TIP AGAIN before putting it away or turning it off. I am a Hakko snob. |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
$80 Craigslist find turned out to be basically a Washburn with a cheaper plywood body that was begging for mods...
Attached File Attached File Attached File Attached File Attached File The rosewood was a particularly nice piece from back when even the cheap guitars got nice slabs. Parts list: Wilkinson EZ Lok tuners Wilkinson licensed Korean ashtray bridge with brass compensated saddles Tonerider Hot Classics pickups set GFS wiring harness Fender knobs, roller string trees, control plate. Attached File |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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SRV Number 1 inspired: This guitar started out from a loaded SRV pickguard that was in a MIM Strat I bought used and also had the original pickguard and parts with it. I ended up putting the MIM back to stock form and sold it but kept the SRV pickguard set. Gathered parts individually when I found deals and a guitar was born.
Body: Fender American Original 50’s Stratocaster in 2 tone sunburst Neck: Fender American Original 60’s Stratocaster maple neck with rosewood fretboard Hardware: Fender American Original 50’s vintage style chrome bridge assembly, Fender vintage style chrome tuners. Electronics: Loaded SRV pickguard, Fender Texas Special Pickups and Fender wiring. Attached File Attached File Updated and latest configuration: Changed out to gold hardware including a Fender Custom Shop 62’ reissue bridge. I never really fell in love with the Texas Special pickups so also changed to a new 3 ply pickguard and wired it with Seymour Duncan SSL-5 pickups. I did try a Lindy Fralin Vintage Hot Strat in the bridge first but it didn’t mix well with the SSL-5s in the other locations. Attached File |
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David Gilmour Black Strat inspired: This one started life as a loaded up pickguard that I was going to swap into an American Standard I had and ended up selling to a friend. Found a deal on Reverb for the 3 tone sunburst body and the American Original series are nitro finishes so this is a small detail that makes it a little closer to the Black Strat than what the Am Standard would have been. Gilmour’s Black Strat started out as a sunburst with the black paint over top also so maybe one day I will spray it with black nitro over the burst.
Body: Fender American Original 60’s Stratocaster in 3 tone sunburst Neck: Fender American Original 50’s Stratocaster maple neck with maple fretboard Hardware: Fender American Original 60’s vintage style chrome bridge assembly, Fender vintage style chrome tuners. Pickups: Seymour Duncan SSL5 (Bridge), Fender Custom shop 69 (Middle), Fender Custom Shop Fat 50’s (Neck) Wiring: 7 way (Gilmour style), Fender 5 way Strat switch, CTS Pots, cheap mini toggle to engage the neck pickup. Attached File Attached File Second iteration I picked up a Fender Custom Shop 59’ reissue Birdseye maple neck. It was short lived and the Am Original 50’s neck when back on. The 59’neck ended up sprouted into yet another guitar. Attached File Third iteration and current setup has the 3 ply pickguard changed out for a single ply black. Swapped the other plastic parts to parchment from the aged white and also changed the SSL 5 bridge pickup for Seymour Duncan custom shop hand wound DG SSL-1. Attached File |
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Fender Custom Shop 59’: This one started as a neck swap purchase that didn’t really fit the other project. I was able to pick up the body that the neck was originally built with by the Fender Custom Shop and put it back together to spec, I also have the factory build paper for it. All of the other components are from other Custom shop 59’ reissue guitars except the neck plate, it’s just a standard gold Fender plate since I couldn’t find the one from the original build with the SN on it.
Body: Fender Custom Shop 59’ NOS Seafoam Green Neck: Fender Custom Shop 59’ Birdseye maple neck with maple fretboard Hardware: Fender Custom Shop 59’ Gold bridge and vintage tuners Pickups: Fender Custom shop Josefina hand wound 59’ pickups Attached File Attached File |
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2019 Gibson Firebird:
Bought the parted out body/neck on sale with the plan to route out the pickup cavities for full sized humbuckers but after a couple of others talked me out of it I went more traditional. Body/Neck: Gibson Firebird Pickups: Mojotone Johnny Winter pickups Pickguard: 5 ply black with white logo Hardware: Gibson Chrome Tune-o-matic bridge and Stop bar tailpiece Attached File Attached File Attached File |
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Originally Posted By SirPsycho: Fender Custom Shop 59’: This one started as a neck swap purchase that didn’t really fit the other project. I was able to pick up the body that the neck was originally built with by the Fender Custom Shop and put it back together to spec, I also have the factory build paper for it. All of the other components are from other Custom shop 59’ reissue guitars except the neck plate, it’s just a standard gold Fender plate since I couldn’t find the one from the original build with the SN on it. Body: Fender Custom Shop 59’ NOS Seafoam Green Neck: Fender Custom Shop 59’ Birdseye maple neck with maple fretboard Hardware: Fender Custom Shop 59’ Gold bridge and vintage tuners Pickups: Fender Custom shop Josefina hand wound 59’ pickups https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/256712/20200620_211201_jpg-2265958.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/256712/20200825_124304_jpg-2265961.JPG View Quote I actually really want a classic SSS strat in a lighter green color than that. Dunno why. |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: Looks wider...huh. On soldering, the main trick is to keep the tip clean. So, get it up to temp, wipe with moist sponge, apply a small drop of solder to the tip, press that solder to the object being soldered, add enough solder to soak all connections necessary, then CLEAN THE TIP AGAIN before putting it away or turning it off. I am a Hakko snob. View Quote Thanks for the tips they will come in handy. |
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Recapping prior build...
Started with 200+ year old pine that saw a few hurricanes in the 100 years it was actually someone's home, nail holes, hammer marks and all... Attached File Attached File Attached File Not without challenges.. Attached File Attached File Tung oil.. Attached File Attached File I went through a few different pickups. The Gretschbuckers looked the best but didn't do what I wanted. Attached File $79 Neck from Reverb that came with Warmoth bone nut. Needed no fret leveling, just some polishing. Vintage tint went well with the tung oil finish. Attached File Continued... |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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When first completed:
Attached File Attached File Final version...with locking tuners and Seymour Duncan Psyclones: Attached File Attached File |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By Czechers: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/20201012_144759_jpg-1632522_jpg-2267764.JPG View Quote That has got to be one of the top 5 sexiest guitar bodies I have ever seen. Amazing. What does it weigh? I'm planning a build out of some dogwood from our favorite tree that finally died. I may have to do a top layer over softer wood for the body depending on how well I can cut the dogwood. I would love to buy an unfinished neck with a roasted maple back and no fretboard and try to make a fretboard from the dogwood as well. Yes, I have been warned about the dimensional stability issues of dogwood. I don't care...this is an emotional build, not a rational one. |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: That has got to be one of the top 5 sexiest guitar bodies I have ever seen. Amazing. What does it weigh? I'm planning a build out of some dogwood from our favorite tree that finally died. I may have to do a top layer over softer wood for the body depending on how well I can cut the dogwood. I would love to buy an unfinished neck with a roasted maple back and no fretboard and try to make a fretboard from the dogwood as well. Yes, I have been warned about the dimensional stability issues of dogwood. I don't care...this is an emotional build, not a rational one. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: Originally Posted By Czechers: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/20201012_144759_jpg-1632522_jpg-2267764.JPG That has got to be one of the top 5 sexiest guitar bodies I have ever seen. Amazing. What does it weigh? I'm planning a build out of some dogwood from our favorite tree that finally died. I may have to do a top layer over softer wood for the body depending on how well I can cut the dogwood. I would love to buy an unfinished neck with a roasted maple back and no fretboard and try to make a fretboard from the dogwood as well. Yes, I have been warned about the dimensional stability issues of dogwood. I don't care...this is an emotional build, not a rational one. Thanks, some nail-biting moments like when I was shaping the neck pocket and really took too much wood off. The wood is extremely hard and dry though, much more like working with maple. It's 8.3 lbs but it's Strat thickness not standard Tele thickness due to starting with 2x4's. The whole concept was pretty organic. When I was living in Corpus Christi for work, I went and salvaged a bunch of tongue and groove boards from a demolished 1920's house to build some small benches for everyone in the family, and decided to grab some studwood to do a coffee table for the wife. She decided later to use some salvaged antique Mexican doors for the coffee table so these studs just kept getting hauled around as we moved. I later decided to revisit the guitar playing hobby, then I wanted to build...then remembered I had this wood stashed away. The salt immersion from the house surviving being flooded in multiple hurricanes I think created the unique coloration around the edges once the oil was applied. It damn near matches the tint on the neck. I got really lucky in a lot of places where the body could have become scrap wood. |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By Czechers: Thanks, some nail-biting moments like when I was shaping the neck pocket and really took too much wood off. The wood is extremely hard and dry though, much more like working with maple. It's 8.3 lbs but it's Strat thickness not standard Tele thickness due to starting with 2x4's. The whole concept was pretty organic. When I was living in Corpus Christi for work, I went and salvaged a bunch of tongue and groove boards from a demolished 1920's house to build some small benches for everyone in the family, and decided to grab some studwood to do a coffee table for the wife. She decided later to use some salvaged antique Mexican doors for the coffee table so these studs just kept getting hauled around as we moved. I later decided to revisit the guitar playing hobby, then I wanted to build...then remembered I had this wood stashed away. The salt immersion from the house surviving being flooded in multiple hurricanes I think created the unique coloration around the edges once the oil was applied. It damn near matches the tint on the neck. I got really lucky in a lot of places where the body could have become scrap wood. View Quote Hold up! What's the triple P90 in the background?!? |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Originally Posted By Czechers: That was my SX Liquid with different pickups and knobs than the earlier pic below. Wasn't inspiring me so it went bye bye to cash flow other projects. I think I'll set my sights on a Reverend Warhawk 390 when the P90 bug hits me again. https://i.postimg.cc/sXpCvLYY/20200424_172727.jpg View Quote strangeboner.gif |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: strangeboner.gif View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: Originally Posted By Czechers: That was my SX Liquid with different pickups and knobs than the earlier pic below. Wasn't inspiring me so it went bye bye to cash flow other projects. I think I'll set my sights on a Reverend Warhawk 390 when the P90 bug hits me again. https://i.postimg.cc/sXpCvLYY/20200424_172727.jpg strangeboner.gif Nothing wrong with it really but it wasn't great in any way except positions 4 and 5 convinced me that I definitely will end up with a 3 p90 guitar again. I put Wilkinson Premium MIK pickups in bridge and middle and an Artec/Guitar Madness one in the neck. I was about to swap the middle and neck before I got rid of it. It had an alder body also. There is something very "strat on 'roids" about positions 4 and 5. I got it right before the pandemic for $139 (cheap or free delivery). I still thinks the SX Liquids are great Mod platforms and I would have put a Bigsby on it had I kept it. I actually like the SX headstock on this particular model.. |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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That turned out great Czechers. Re purposing old wood is pretty cool. I've got a source for old chestnut barn wood. I'll bet that wood make a nice looking guitarnail holes and all
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Nothing cool ever happens to me
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Originally Posted By 19suburban96: That turned out great Czechers. Re purposing old wood is pretty cool. I've got a source for old chestnut barn wood. I'll bet that wood make a nice looking guitarnail holes and all View Quote Attached File |
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Originally Posted By 19suburban96: That turned out great Czechers. Re purposing old wood is pretty cool. I've got a source for old chestnut barn wood. I'll bet that wood make a nice looking guitarnail holes and all View Quote Paoletti uses "130+ year old chestnut wine barrels" for their bodies and its gorgeous. Attached File |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By Czechers: Paoletti uses "130+ year old chestnut wine barrels" for their bodies and its gorgeous. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/fullsizeoutput_8a67_1200x_jpg-2269660.JPG View Quote They could probably use pallet-wood and they'd be awesome. |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: They could probably use pallet-wood and they'd be awesome. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: Originally Posted By Czechers: Paoletti uses "130+ year old chestnut wine barrels" for their bodies and its gorgeous. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/fullsizeoutput_8a67_1200x_jpg-2269660.JPG They could probably use pallet-wood and they'd be awesome. I'm not one that thinks wood matters on full solid body electric guitars but I love the feel of the tung oiled pine in my hands. Mojo of the instrument means something. My daughter even asked me to make sure I willed it to her. Her guitar is flat tobacco finished so it will make a nice set. Knowing she'll cherish it long after I'm gone makes me want to play it more. |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By Czechers: My latest work...tore down the PT Fastback to lighten it and add locking tuners. Word of advice, tape up your Bigsby pretty good if leaving it on. I didn't realize I dumped the washer that goes under the spring into the sawdust pile until the trash truck was driving away with my bag of shavings... Going to try with the arm lower for now. Just used a 1" and 1.5" forstner bit in a benchtop drill press. My washer is somewhere in here: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220129_114922361_jpg-2263805.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220126_155423522_jpg-2263809.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220129_115817263_jpg-2263811.JPG Polished my damaged frets out while I was screwing everything else up.. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220125_171020500_HDR_jpg-2263813.JPG Innards of a Schecter PT Fastback IIB for anyone interested. G&B pickups unsurprisingly: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220124_181456729_jpg-2263814.JPG Overall, the lightening project yielded noticeable results but someone forgot to weigh it before reassembly to see the actual difference before/after . I found out it really isn't the body wood, but the combination of th heaviest possible hardware and electronics you could put on a Tele so the gains in removing wood are minimal. I am going to do this with my cheap Tele with traditional bridge and pickups which will show more gains I'm sure. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220202_073357720_HDR_jpg-2263828.JPG The board is really a nice piece of rosewood, especially after some lemon oil. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG_20220129_124553951_HDR_jpg-2263829.JPG View Quote I hate to rehash the the Spinal Tap meme but the chambering resulted in a huge increase in acoustic resonance in this guitar. I literally brushed the strings while taking another guitar out of the rack and then noticed some residual ringing in the PT that seemed to go beyond what I've ever heard in a solidbody before. Not sure if this is bc the pickguard covers the new chamber or what. It's a very pure resonance, not like a bad sympathetic vibration you hear in tremolo or pickup springs. |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By shade_1313: Okay. A while back, I took my parts PJ and decided to put some old school cool on it. It also served to let me get some practice and experience at installing threaded brass inserts for projects I have in mind for later. https://i.imgur.com/CVFZYxF.jpg Oops. Well, that'll hold far better than a simple screw into the edge of the wood would have, so it's for the best. https://i.imgur.com/yU9aagL.jpg https://i.imgur.com/tspMxhY.jpg There. Old school aesthetics to make a freaky mutant P body with J covers and bridge pickup. All with brass threaded inserts so I won't wear the wood out removing the bridge cover every time I change strings. View Quote I like the chrome bits, what's the chrome bit horizontal above the strings? |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
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Originally Posted By shade_1313: Okay. A while back, I took my parts PJ and decided to put some old school cool on it. It also served to let me get some practice and experience at installing threaded brass inserts for projects I have in mind for later. https://i.imgur.com/CVFZYxF.jpg Oops. Well, that'll hold far better than a simple screw into the edge of the wood would have, so it's for the best. https://i.imgur.com/yU9aagL.jpg https://i.imgur.com/tspMxhY.jpg There. Old school aesthetics to make a freaky mutant P body with J covers and bridge pickup. All with brass threaded inserts so I won't wear the wood out removing the bridge cover every time I change strings. View Quote Looks good with the covers installed. |
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Some of the coolest custom knobs I've seen made. ...and all ya'll Glock fanboys love yer stippling .
The prior vids in this series are pretty informative as well. Ep 3.5 My Daughter HATES a guitar I made for her! Custom Dome Nut Control Knobs |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By Czechers: Some of the coolest custom knobs I've seen made. ...and all ya'll Glock fanboys love yer stippling . The prior vids in this series are pretty informative as well. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggn8x6C9HvI View Quote FAL gas knobs mo bettah! |
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
I feel like I had a big win this weekend when I realized my pinecaster build is the most tuning stable electric I own. With big temp and humidity swings this time of year, my Schecter and Ibanez are usually a little out of tune from day to day but this little thing I built on the cheap is nearly perfectly in tune when I pick it up. I would have thought my shimmed neck pocket and cheap neck, and pine body would have more issues from the environment. Huh.
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat: FAL gas knobs mo bettah! https://www.dropbox.com/s/w1d5wzxx6n21k89/shitarfalknobs.jpg?raw=1 View Quote What kinda gas knobs? |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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Happiness=UPS+ORMD
See my youtube page at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvx8dT3bnLFUvuEQ-N3Z6rg |
Tattoo'd and Voted #1 in blind taste tests.
TX, USA
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I took some use or lose annual leave this week, I may start taking my beater Mitchell apart to refinish her.
Want to give it that 80's fluorescent metal vibe. Attached File ETA: I am not sure if I should just lightly sand the whole body and fill in the dents and missing wood and sand again, or 100% strip it all down to bare wood. What say you all? |
(_@___]]~~ It is better to smoke here, than here after. Grab a cigar.
http://www.marinebattleherk.com |
Tattoo'd and Voted #1 in blind taste tests.
TX, USA
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(_@___]]~~ It is better to smoke here, than here after. Grab a cigar.
http://www.marinebattleherk.com |
Originally Posted By Czechers: $80 Craigslist find turned out to be basically a Washburn with a cheaper plywood body that was begging for mods... https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/FB-IMG-15669142547960124_jpg-2265868.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG-20190831-163039462_jpg-2265869.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG-20190831-163026591_jpg-2265870.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG-20190831-163313408_jpg-2265872.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/IMG-20190831-164701264_jpg-2265874.JPG The rosewood was a particularly nice piece from back when even the cheap guitars got nice slabs. Parts list: Wilkinson EZ Lok tuners Wilkinson licensed Korean ashtray bridge with brass compensated saddles Tonerider Hot Classics pickups set GFS wiring harness Fender knobs, roller string trees, control plate. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/300247/20200101-174446_jpg-2265885.JPG View Quote Took 0000 steel wool to the finish just to take the shine off and after 30 min it barely scuffed the surface. That old poly is tough stuff I could see taking an orbital with very fine grit to it. Not trying to relic, just give it that handled look. |
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Crap Magnet Extraordinaire
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