MDF Mosrite
Moderated By: mods
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- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 3:31 am
- Location: Jefferson, GA
- Fran
- The Curmudgeon
- Posts: 22219
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 5:53 am
- Location: Nottingham, Englandshire.
I agree Cowy, its just a bit of a personal fail thing with finishing guitars that bothers me, not so much a fail for my projects. The Black JS i built is already looking a little relic'd (due to my flimsy finishing) but im happy about it, it looks good with the 70s Bronco neck.More Cowbell wrote:Don't worry about the finish not being perfect Fran. Have you seen the "road worn" series up close? They look some kid painted it then they sanded and beat it here and there until it looked relic'd. So I'm sure its gonna look good!!
So yeah, im hoping this Mosrite copy will wear fairly quickly as well.
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
I will need to improve my finishing skillz though, especially if i ever plan to build some guitars to actually sell.
have you finished it with wet and dry 1200 grade and then some t-cut polishing?Fran wrote:Well, i had several days of lacquering. The finish is okay, not amazing but reasonable. Punk innit.
So i constructed it together tonight, it looks the business and it intonates (i was dreading some unforseen mistake in this area) which im very happy about because this was built from various ideas with random parts. I had no 'original' model to keep referring back to, just an internet picture as you all know.
I just put the top and bottom E on to insure the neck was aligned correctly, then fixed the neck. Plugged it in to see how it sounds... awesome upon first impression.
The Burns Rez-o-matic produces some growling Tele-tones whilst the Artec mini humbucker is the pleasant surprise here. I expected thin-squealy craptones, but its nothing of the sort- more P90 territory with plenty of clarity for a neck pup. The MDF construction may have some influence on this(?)
Anyways, my iPhone wont load pictures up for some odd reason but i will get some better quality shots tomorrow so ya'll can have a look. i will also go into more depth on its sound and get some samples up over the next week.
- Fran
- The Curmudgeon
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- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 5:53 am
- Location: Nottingham, Englandshire.
Chisa- Maybe i was'nt specefic, i used Yacht varnish thinned down. Upon some research you are looking at 2+ weeks before you can even consider polishing. I just have'nt got the patience lol.
I used Yacht Varnish on the JS and it worked well at low cost.
I'm definitely considering Nitro for my next project, or maybe even a two pack cellulose paint. I can finish natural fine, its when i start using color everything goes pear shape.
Incidentally, the total cost for this was around £120. The Aerosol Paint, Custom Pickguard and the Artec Mini Humbucker accounting for 75% of that total.
I used Yacht Varnish on the JS and it worked well at low cost.
I'm definitely considering Nitro for my next project, or maybe even a two pack cellulose paint. I can finish natural fine, its when i start using color everything goes pear shape.
Incidentally, the total cost for this was around £120. The Aerosol Paint, Custom Pickguard and the Artec Mini Humbucker accounting for 75% of that total.
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- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 3:31 am
- Location: Jefferson, GA
Do you guys have autoparts stores that sell car paint in a spray can?? Use the clear coat version of that, they usually dry within 48 hours and then you can wet sand/buff it. I think thats what Hurb used on his Black Jazzy, and I used it on my old Bronco. It worked great. But Nitro wetsands and polishes up the easiest. Also use Baby oil to wet sand with instead of water. Have you been to the Re-ranch site and read the how to on wet sanding?
- BobArsecake
- a mannequin made by madmen
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- laterallateral
- Traynor or Death
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- endsjustifymeans
- Grown Up Punk
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Looks great Fran. I was just thinking, if you had the will, you could dig out them inlays and fill them with wood glue mixed up with rosewood dust. Surely you have an old rosewood neck lying around some place that you could shave for the job. Then you could drill teeny holes and glue some white plastic in there for the Mosrite style dots.