Compensated bridge bits on a budget
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- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
Compensated bridge bits on a budget
Kept running into a lot of tele parts in the basement. Took the challenge to put together one with minimum cost. Always fun.
Body is CV50. I think relicing is a combination of classroom use and then some screwdriver-chisel brutalness on top of that. Got it in a swap sometimes. Neck is mim standard, got it real cheap some time back. Has been played, on second set of frets and they are worn already too. No fret job yet, minimum cost dont care ´bout a few rattles. Thing was, i had almost everything to complete this. Pickup is from a 80´s Tokai, did a pickup swap for a friend and he gave me that one. Had this tele pickguard I´ve used as template. Figured its cheaper without a neck pickup so taped it over. Esquire it is. Don´t have switch, but have an awesome idea for it, more later. One extremely important thing was missing...
No bridge saddles.
Bare minimum means local scrapyard. They didnt have knurled ones, which i really like on my Musicmaster, instead I got this 50´s tele spec brass rod, 2 meters, cost €1. Tape on, right size measured on.
Found these. Intonation screws, a few too short and few too long.
Body is CV50. I think relicing is a combination of classroom use and then some screwdriver-chisel brutalness on top of that. Got it in a swap sometimes. Neck is mim standard, got it real cheap some time back. Has been played, on second set of frets and they are worn already too. No fret job yet, minimum cost dont care ´bout a few rattles. Thing was, i had almost everything to complete this. Pickup is from a 80´s Tokai, did a pickup swap for a friend and he gave me that one. Had this tele pickguard I´ve used as template. Figured its cheaper without a neck pickup so taped it over. Esquire it is. Don´t have switch, but have an awesome idea for it, more later. One extremely important thing was missing...
No bridge saddles.
Bare minimum means local scrapyard. They didnt have knurled ones, which i really like on my Musicmaster, instead I got this 50´s tele spec brass rod, 2 meters, cost €1. Tape on, right size measured on.
Found these. Intonation screws, a few too short and few too long.
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
Drilled the holes as measured earlier. Found some height screws. Black ones are not my favourite but who cares. Everythings now the same size so fast to drill.
My thought was that because its hard to drill straight, ill make compensated saddles, as they are not. Drill all intonation holes next to each other, then flip the middle one over.
To get height screws approximately right, marked the intonation ones direction roughly by pencil. It´s Fender parts anyway, definitely not rocket science.
Threading next.
My thought was that because its hard to drill straight, ill make compensated saddles, as they are not. Drill all intonation holes next to each other, then flip the middle one over.
To get height screws approximately right, marked the intonation ones direction roughly by pencil. It´s Fender parts anyway, definitely not rocket science.
Threading next.
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
- henkstroem
- .
- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
- vojtasTS29
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- Posts: 314
- Joined: Mon Aug 03, 2015 2:35 pm
- Location: Prague
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
Thanks!vojtasTS29 wrote:That guitar is really cool, you did a really good makeshift job with those saddles. And i had a little moment of patriotism seeing the Narex logo (czech tool making brand) !
Most my tools used to belong to my granddad, theres loads of cool 50s - 70s stuff in his basement. Quality that I could not afford today - luckily with proper care they'll most likely outlast me...tuff stuff.
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
Heres a shot of the headstock. More pics next time I sit down with it.
Tuners are the splurge detail in this guitar, gotoh no-line kluson clones. Tip of the day: Get gotoh conversion bushings if you want the vintage look, they're like a tenner more than el cheapo bushings, sharper edge. El cheapo works well too, but look more modern, rounded plump look.
Wanted to try out different kluson clones a few years back and just bought different brands and tried them out. Gotoh was nice, but not the only good one. Should prob do a separate thread of that experiment.
It's such a classic, boring and regular headstock design that I kinda like it. Like when you get hypothermia and think that you're boiling hot.
Tuners are the splurge detail in this guitar, gotoh no-line kluson clones. Tip of the day: Get gotoh conversion bushings if you want the vintage look, they're like a tenner more than el cheapo bushings, sharper edge. El cheapo works well too, but look more modern, rounded plump look.
Wanted to try out different kluson clones a few years back and just bought different brands and tried them out. Gotoh was nice, but not the only good one. Should prob do a separate thread of that experiment.
It's such a classic, boring and regular headstock design that I kinda like it. Like when you get hypothermia and think that you're boiling hot.
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm
It´s in working condition. Bakelite pg in mail. Just gotta wait for warmer weather to lacquer it.
Wiring is inspired by a "organ button" esquire discussion in tdpri. Theres a pic in some book with a black prototype NAMM show - esquire from ~1950 that has a button instead of the pickup switch. Could be primitive photoshopping, or a lap steel button. Wired it to bypass the vol pot when pushed, for a solo sound. Works, and the switch cost ~$1.
Wiring is inspired by a "organ button" esquire discussion in tdpri. Theres a pic in some book with a black prototype NAMM show - esquire from ~1950 that has a button instead of the pickup switch. Could be primitive photoshopping, or a lap steel button. Wired it to bypass the vol pot when pushed, for a solo sound. Works, and the switch cost ~$1.
- henkstroem
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- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Nov 17, 2015 10:34 pm