Can this be fixed?
Moderated By: mods
- robert(original)
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- Posts: 7174
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 12:30 pm
- Location: somewhere in the midwest
it can be fixed for less, im suprised that they wanted that much, i fixed an alvarez acoustic a couple weeks ago that had the same damage, granted i repainted the headstock.
if you want i could probly walk you thru the easiest way to fix it.
as long as its just two peices, and there are no small bits floating around.
and in all reality if its clean enough you shouldn't have to do any real "finish" work
if you want i could probly walk you thru the easiest way to fix it.
as long as its just two peices, and there are no small bits floating around.
and in all reality if its clean enough you shouldn't have to do any real "finish" work
Fuck's sake! I love those guitars (actually, I have a friend thinking of buying the 200 in Belfast for more than you got that for. Have you the number of the shop in Dublin, that I can pass on to him?)
Given that it's your first gigging guitar, I wouldn't worry about how it looks. My first gigging guitar is beat to fuck, and I like it that way somehow, I can see all the great gigs that happened to it. If I were you, I'd get it playable using the clamps and glue, and not worry about how it looks.
But at the same time, it's a pretty looking thing, so it might be worth getting it done all nice. You may as well shop around before giving it to anybody. Try Matchette's in Belfast, and Marcus too. Don't try the Guitar Emproium, they'l likely tell you that it can't be fixed and that you'll need to replace it with the Gibson model or else your dog will die.
I also have the number of a pretty good luthier in Belfast if you want that. Dunno what he charges though, but he did me a full set up for a tenner. Probably a friend's price, mind.
Given that it's your first gigging guitar, I wouldn't worry about how it looks. My first gigging guitar is beat to fuck, and I like it that way somehow, I can see all the great gigs that happened to it. If I were you, I'd get it playable using the clamps and glue, and not worry about how it looks.
But at the same time, it's a pretty looking thing, so it might be worth getting it done all nice. You may as well shop around before giving it to anybody. Try Matchette's in Belfast, and Marcus too. Don't try the Guitar Emproium, they'l likely tell you that it can't be fixed and that you'll need to replace it with the Gibson model or else your dog will die.
I also have the number of a pretty good luthier in Belfast if you want that. Dunno what he charges though, but he did me a full set up for a tenner. Probably a friend's price, mind.
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- endsjustifymeans
- Grown Up Punk
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- Location: Ball So Hard University
This is the correct answerWill wrote:
Or you can do it yourself and feel pride every time you see the crack, because YOU fixed it.
dots wrote:society is crumbling because of asshoels like ends
brainfur wrote:I'm having difficulty reconciling my desire to smash the state & kill all white people with my desire for a new telecaster
- endsjustifymeans
- Grown Up Punk
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- Joined: Tue Feb 10, 2009 4:02 pm
- Location: Ball So Hard University
My first guitar was a 70's Teisco hollowbody. My ex-bassist uses it as his "songwriting" guitar now.mage wrote:what guitar is that?robroe wrote:my first gutiar is in pieces under my bed. the humbucker from it is now in my =w= strat
my first guitar was an epihone lp special II. it is in pieces at my dad's house. the humbuckers are also in pieces.
dots wrote:society is crumbling because of asshoels like ends
brainfur wrote:I'm having difficulty reconciling my desire to smash the state & kill all white people with my desire for a new telecaster
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- Sweetheart of the Rodeo
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Tue Apr 18, 2006 1:34 pm
- Location: Dublin - Northsoide
thanks everyone
a lot more hopeful now, can't afford 500 to fix this guitar, so will clamp it up with some No More Nails! or wood glue (any preference?) and see how I get on.
Is there a need to build a jig to apply pressure along the length of the guitar, or is a simple clamp job good enough?
I don't give two hoots about an ugly finish either, just want my old acoustic playable.
a lot more hopeful now, can't afford 500 to fix this guitar, so will clamp it up with some No More Nails! or wood glue (any preference?) and see how I get on.
Is there a need to build a jig to apply pressure along the length of the guitar, or is a simple clamp job good enough?
I don't give two hoots about an ugly finish either, just want my old acoustic playable.
everything is not going to be alright
this. +1.mage wrote:what guitar is that?robroe wrote:my first gutiar is in pieces under my bed. the humbucker from it is now in my =w= strat
my first guitar was an epiphone SG special . it is in pieces at my dad's house. the humbuckers are also in pieces.
aen wrote:hotrodperlmutter wrote:being butt fucked by a lion is better than the stock [CIJ Jaguar] bridge pup.
You need to pin it. The glue will work if it's good enough, but you want to get a pin or two connecting the two pieces back together as well. It will never break again, and would even be stronger than before.
You can use wooden dowels or use something more substantial, such as metal rods. You'll want two of them, not drilled in too deep, just enough that they'll act as an anchor. To get the alignment right, paint a little circle using the end of the material you're using to pin the break and just press the other side into it, so the paint shows up on that piece too. Drill away. Be careful to get the alignment correct, of course.
I'm not sure if repairers do this, but it's what I would do. When you're trying to shit to stick together and all you've got is a plain surface, it can be a real pain without some kind of anchor.
You can use wooden dowels or use something more substantial, such as metal rods. You'll want two of them, not drilled in too deep, just enough that they'll act as an anchor. To get the alignment right, paint a little circle using the end of the material you're using to pin the break and just press the other side into it, so the paint shows up on that piece too. Drill away. Be careful to get the alignment correct, of course.
I'm not sure if repairers do this, but it's what I would do. When you're trying to shit to stick together and all you've got is a plain surface, it can be a real pain without some kind of anchor.
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Brandon W wrote:you elites.
- robert(original)
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- Posts: 7174
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 12:30 pm
- Location: somewhere in the midwest
hey! hold up, before you just glue it. take a stake gun, shoot the staple into the neck end of the break, clip the ends of the staple down about 1 mm. that will help it alot more than you think, and titebond is GREAT STUFF! no matter what, do not use gorilla glue, that shite expands and we all know that glue does not bond to itself that well.
also, if there is enough room a few small dowl rods in the truss rod area will also help ALOT!
a good glue bond is 10x stronger than wood grain garenteed.
just remember to map things out and think about what you are about to do before you do it.
days upon days of prep is much better than a few hours of quik thought. trust me, i have fuct up before and been like, "why the hell didn't i just take my time.
most notably is on james neck thru where i hit the truss rod rout on the back of the headstock and it was really just me trying to go too fast and not taking enough time, now that costs me loads more time trying to fix/rememdy the problem.
also, if there is enough room a few small dowl rods in the truss rod area will also help ALOT!
a good glue bond is 10x stronger than wood grain garenteed.
just remember to map things out and think about what you are about to do before you do it.
days upon days of prep is much better than a few hours of quik thought. trust me, i have fuct up before and been like, "why the hell didn't i just take my time.
most notably is on james neck thru where i hit the truss rod rout on the back of the headstock and it was really just me trying to go too fast and not taking enough time, now that costs me loads more time trying to fix/rememdy the problem.
I've heard arguments against dowels. Basically, adding a dowel removes a lot of material while not adding much gluing surface (proportionally). Dan Erlewine likes to use long square splines, but that is rather labor intensive and really requires finish work.
I'd just use glue and not worry about it.
I'd just use glue and not worry about it.
- robert(original)
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- Posts: 7174
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 12:30 pm
- Location: somewhere in the midwest