1965 Jazzmaster Clone...
Moderated By: mods
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
New parts soaking up noxious fumes:
And drying after a light mist of saltwater:
Fake body date:
And rusty trem installed with vintage hardware:
I cleaned the excess rust from the large screws on the trem (leaving just the collet and lock button rusty), cleaned up the pickup covers, polished the body to a semi-gloss, and added just a bit of wear to the neck:
Tomorrow I'll polish the neck with steel wool, mount the tuners, and maybe yellow the heel just a bit more...
And drying after a light mist of saltwater:
Fake body date:
And rusty trem installed with vintage hardware:
I cleaned the excess rust from the large screws on the trem (leaving just the collet and lock button rusty), cleaned up the pickup covers, polished the body to a semi-gloss, and added just a bit of wear to the neck:
Tomorrow I'll polish the neck with steel wool, mount the tuners, and maybe yellow the heel just a bit more...
- robert(original)
- .
- Posts: 7174
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 12:30 pm
- Location: somewhere in the midwest
+1fullerplast wrote: Not overdoing it is the key
I generally don't care for relics, because too often the relicing process is overdone and ends up looking fake. But what you've done is minimalist enough to look quite realistic.
Have you posted a group pic of all your guitars? I'd love to see your collection!
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
This is about as close as I have to a recent shot(s) of my guitars:
PARTY!
Although when I was dealing about five years ago, I had over 50 guitars at the most. Almost all of them were Fenders, either short scale or offset. I also had a nice collection of 70s MIJ Lawsuit guitars and some oddball Kays, Harmonys, etc.
PARTY!
Although when I was dealing about five years ago, I had over 50 guitars at the most. Almost all of them were Fenders, either short scale or offset. I also had a nice collection of 70s MIJ Lawsuit guitars and some oddball Kays, Harmonys, etc.
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
OK, there's still no electronics, but I did build the bridge, mount the tuners and string 'er up. I'm really happy with the setup and it sounds great acoustically... nice resonance.
\
I achieved this look by tinting the ends of the neck and sanding and staining the middle:
Additional tinting on the heel:
I used the original holes in the shim:
The bridge. All the parts are vintage except the intonation screws which are correct round head SAE thread:
The bridge is only sitting on a few threads of the "feet". Happily there are no dead frets or excessive buzz:
\
I achieved this look by tinting the ends of the neck and sanding and staining the middle:
Additional tinting on the heel:
I used the original holes in the shim:
The bridge. All the parts are vintage except the intonation screws which are correct round head SAE thread:
The bridge is only sitting on a few threads of the "feet". Happily there are no dead frets or excessive buzz:
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
PROGRESS!
Today I made the pickup shields, fabbed some glaziers, installed them, and connected all the grounds. I have all the electronics on hand now, but am waiting for the pickguard shield and pickup screws.
P.S. I drilled that hole for the trem ground prior to the finish, but forgot to take pictures of it.
Today I made the pickup shields, fabbed some glaziers, installed them, and connected all the grounds. I have all the electronics on hand now, but am waiting for the pickguard shield and pickup screws.
P.S. I drilled that hole for the trem ground prior to the finish, but forgot to take pictures of it.
- markocaster
- .
- Posts: 139
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2008 4:19 pm
- Location: Northern CA by way of Durham UK
- BobArsecake
- a mannequin made by madmen
- Posts: 10957
- Joined: Mon Apr 24, 2006 11:40 am
- Location: Leeds (LeedsLeeds)
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
Thanks Guys!
That brass looks alot better in person, the flash made it look much nastier than it is. I'll probably blob more solder on those glazier points when I wire it up. After everything tarnishes, I think it will look pretty cool.
BTW - Glazier points actually hold window panes in the sash while the window is being glazed (hence the name). I didn't know you could just go buy them at the hardware store until after I wrote my Oly White Jag article and someone emailed and told me. Old Leo was pretty clever. I made my own this time coz I still had a shitload of .032 aluminum from last time.
Ran into a snag today:
I enocuntered the same old problem with the Allparts body. I assumed that when they finally fixed the bridge pickup route, they would also have fixed the width and depth of the rhythm cavity.... NOT!
The tone wheel pot shaft was rubbing on the sides of the cavity, and both wheels were rubbing on the brass. Being an aftermarket body, I could have just taken a few chunks out of it. But I decided to play with it instead. First, I shimmed the tone pot with a washer and that solved the rubbing on the side of the cavity. Then I elongated the holes in the bracket and moved the pots up. To do this, I had to grind off a little tab on the mini-pot cases and clip the phenolic that holds the pot solder joints. Then I had to install the bracket and pots with the wheels loose, and center the wheels in the cutouts prior to securing them. It worked PERFECT on the tone pot. But ironically the volume pot still rubs just a slight bit. It's not much and I think the brass and/or knurled portion of the roller will wear down and stop rubbing fairly soon. Anyway, its not at the point of annoyance.
The problem:
The fix:
Notice how the shaft no longer protrudes on the tone wheel:
Assembled and works fine:
I actually like the wheels sticking up just a bit more than normal.
I saw this on a pic of an original mid-60s custom color JM on the offset forum recently, so I gave it a try:
I'll wire it up this weekend and can pretty much call this one a wrap!
That brass looks alot better in person, the flash made it look much nastier than it is. I'll probably blob more solder on those glazier points when I wire it up. After everything tarnishes, I think it will look pretty cool.
BTW - Glazier points actually hold window panes in the sash while the window is being glazed (hence the name). I didn't know you could just go buy them at the hardware store until after I wrote my Oly White Jag article and someone emailed and told me. Old Leo was pretty clever. I made my own this time coz I still had a shitload of .032 aluminum from last time.
Ran into a snag today:
I enocuntered the same old problem with the Allparts body. I assumed that when they finally fixed the bridge pickup route, they would also have fixed the width and depth of the rhythm cavity.... NOT!
The tone wheel pot shaft was rubbing on the sides of the cavity, and both wheels were rubbing on the brass. Being an aftermarket body, I could have just taken a few chunks out of it. But I decided to play with it instead. First, I shimmed the tone pot with a washer and that solved the rubbing on the side of the cavity. Then I elongated the holes in the bracket and moved the pots up. To do this, I had to grind off a little tab on the mini-pot cases and clip the phenolic that holds the pot solder joints. Then I had to install the bracket and pots with the wheels loose, and center the wheels in the cutouts prior to securing them. It worked PERFECT on the tone pot. But ironically the volume pot still rubs just a slight bit. It's not much and I think the brass and/or knurled portion of the roller will wear down and stop rubbing fairly soon. Anyway, its not at the point of annoyance.
The problem:
The fix:
Notice how the shaft no longer protrudes on the tone wheel:
Assembled and works fine:
I actually like the wheels sticking up just a bit more than normal.
I saw this on a pic of an original mid-60s custom color JM on the offset forum recently, so I gave it a try:
I'll wire it up this weekend and can pretty much call this one a wrap!
- fullerplast
- .
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:52 pm
- Location: In My Room...
I plan to keep it. But sooner or later I'll be wanting something else and it may have to leave to make room....
As far as "value" its all relative to what someone would pay for it. I see guys paying $1600 for Nash partsmasters that look totally wrong, fake and inaccurate to me. Capsule music recently sold an awful looking "belt-sander relic" JM aftermarket partsmaster for about that same price. I'd be ashamed to ask that much...
Not counting labor, I have much less than a new CIJ into this.
I'm just having fun!
As far as "value" its all relative to what someone would pay for it. I see guys paying $1600 for Nash partsmasters that look totally wrong, fake and inaccurate to me. Capsule music recently sold an awful looking "belt-sander relic" JM aftermarket partsmaster for about that same price. I'd be ashamed to ask that much...
Not counting labor, I have much less than a new CIJ into this.
I'm just having fun!