Electric Guitar Build 001
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- Chris Fleming
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Electric Guitar Build 001
Here the guitar I've been working on for a bit. Think I mentioned it in my previous design thread before. Not done much to for ages as I'm needing to chamber out the body due to the weight of the thing and thickness it to accommodate a top plate. Finding it impossible to get access to the tools to do it though. I'm asking around at the mo and should hopefully be able to finish this fucker soon.
Also got to finish off the inside curves of the cutaways and heel block.
One problem I had was fitting bloodwood binding to the smaller curves on the headstock. The grain was running short all the way along the pieces I had prepared and would snap on pretty much every bend. Total pain. For the smallest curve I gave up and finally just carved a lump from some scrap bloodwood I had laying around, glued it in and cut it back. Looks fine now. Not the best at the mitering but it'll do.
Here's what I had in mind for hardware - Gotoh 510UB wrap-around bridge, Gotoh SGV510 machine heads, 2x Kent Armstrong vintage Danelectro PU (neck PU is reverse wound), 1x vol, 1x tone, three way lever on a tele plate. For the pickgaurd and truss rod cover I'm using 3ply red pearl.
The top and headstock plates will be painted. Was thinking pale blue, darker turquoise or near black blue? Not sure yet, I want something that will slightly clash with the redness of the wood and pickgaurd, but be tonally different enough to not be garish. Was also considering a cats eye style f-hole? Not sure?
Some pictures of the back. I was quite happy with the way this turned out considering I did it all by hand... I really need to get me some decent power tools. Will go back and check the curve on the edge once I've done more to the cutaways.
Oh... and this is the neck I'm working on for the design I had posted before. I'll post more in a separate thread anon.
Also got to finish off the inside curves of the cutaways and heel block.
One problem I had was fitting bloodwood binding to the smaller curves on the headstock. The grain was running short all the way along the pieces I had prepared and would snap on pretty much every bend. Total pain. For the smallest curve I gave up and finally just carved a lump from some scrap bloodwood I had laying around, glued it in and cut it back. Looks fine now. Not the best at the mitering but it'll do.
Here's what I had in mind for hardware - Gotoh 510UB wrap-around bridge, Gotoh SGV510 machine heads, 2x Kent Armstrong vintage Danelectro PU (neck PU is reverse wound), 1x vol, 1x tone, three way lever on a tele plate. For the pickgaurd and truss rod cover I'm using 3ply red pearl.
The top and headstock plates will be painted. Was thinking pale blue, darker turquoise or near black blue? Not sure yet, I want something that will slightly clash with the redness of the wood and pickgaurd, but be tonally different enough to not be garish. Was also considering a cats eye style f-hole? Not sure?
Some pictures of the back. I was quite happy with the way this turned out considering I did it all by hand... I really need to get me some decent power tools. Will go back and check the curve on the edge once I've done more to the cutaways.
Oh... and this is the neck I'm working on for the design I had posted before. I'll post more in a separate thread anon.
Last edited by Chris Fleming on Mon Sep 09, 2013 2:47 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Chris Fleming
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- Posts: 507
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2013 8:14 am
- Location: Glasgow
- Chris Fleming
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- Joined: Wed May 08, 2013 8:14 am
- Location: Glasgow
- robert(original)
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- robert(original)
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- Chris Fleming
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For plastic binding you can soak in it some hot water. Form it and tape it in place... when cool, remove it and glue it in place.
Wood binding, you may need to warm it up with a heat gun or blow dryer.
You can get away with a spade bit or any bit in general for stock removal. But yeh, we all use forstner bits...
Wood binding, you may need to warm it up with a heat gun or blow dryer.
You can get away with a spade bit or any bit in general for stock removal. But yeh, we all use forstner bits...
- Chris Fleming
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CheersDave wrote:I like it! nice work.
Joey - My mate has a bending iron that I can use so I'll be ok to bend it, just the type of wood is a bit tricky on the tight curves. I've bound two acoustic guitars that I've made before so I do know what I'm doing. Cheers though, I never new you bend plastic binding like that
- Chris Fleming
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- Chris Fleming
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Just wondering as I've already profiled the fingerboard with the 12" block, but need to do a bit more to get it spot on, and if I'm going to change it, now would be the time as I'm going to fit the frets in the next few days. Is going to be that noticeable? Could maybe see I can get a hold of a 14" block?
I would think that I would not really be that noticeable. The flatter radius bridge would probably, when the D and G strings were set to the proper non-buzz height, only raise the high and low E strings a fraction of a millimeter. You can take a string and a pencil and trace 12" and 14" radius to see that with the ~2" width of the neck at the butt end it will not be much at all.
I think there has been recent threads about this (maybe honeyischool swapped a roller bridge onto one of his mustangs or something like that).
I think there has been recent threads about this (maybe honeyischool swapped a roller bridge onto one of his mustangs or something like that).
- Chris Fleming
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- Posts: 507
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2013 8:14 am
- Location: Glasgow
- Chris Fleming
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- Posts: 507
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2013 8:14 am
- Location: Glasgow
Quick update - Got the paint I ordered through and sprayed the headstock. Forgot the primer but it seems to have pretty good coverage and I had sealed the neck with Z-poxy, which worked pretty well. The colour is pretty much what I wanted but I think the red pearl might be too much against it? I'll be able to judge it better once the clear coat goes on, which I should hopefully get through in the next few days.
I put it on on really thin layers but it still seemed to show up. Is it best to leave the slight orange peal and sand it smooth when clear coating?
I put it on on really thin layers but it still seemed to show up. Is it best to leave the slight orange peal and sand it smooth when clear coating?
- Chris Fleming
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- robert(original)
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- Chris Fleming
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- Joined: Wed May 08, 2013 8:14 am
- Location: Glasgow
Ya... think I'll got with the mint. Pretty tricky to source though for a decent price. Found some on ebay though so shouldn't be too bad.
DGNR8 - Cheers. Thought it was totally original when I first came up with the shape but soon found a few with similar cutaways but like mine more so hey. Inspired headstock, very kind. I came up with it when designing my acoustic for second year at college. The idea being that I wanted the strings to run straighter than the did with the Martin or Gibson style as they almost collided with the string pole and looked messy. Found it quite an awkward shape though til I came up the double hump thing, which I based on wanting it to have a deco feel but couldn't get the stepped block type thing to work so went with curves instead. This one isn't as accurate as it should be as I had to mess with it to get the binding to fit. Bloodwood is a pain
DGNR8 - Cheers. Thought it was totally original when I first came up with the shape but soon found a few with similar cutaways but like mine more so hey. Inspired headstock, very kind. I came up with it when designing my acoustic for second year at college. The idea being that I wanted the strings to run straighter than the did with the Martin or Gibson style as they almost collided with the string pole and looked messy. Found it quite an awkward shape though til I came up the double hump thing, which I based on wanting it to have a deco feel but couldn't get the stepped block type thing to work so went with curves instead. This one isn't as accurate as it should be as I had to mess with it to get the binding to fit. Bloodwood is a pain
- Chris Fleming
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- Posts: 507
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2013 8:14 am
- Location: Glasgow