New shorty in my stable

Painting? Routing? Set-up tips? Or just straight-up making a guitar from scratch? Post here, and post pics!

Moderated By: mods

User avatar
spellcaster
.
.
Posts: 30
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 9:08 pm

New shorty in my stable

Post by spellcaster »

I've always been a big fan of short scale guitars and have guitars starting at 24" scale and basses starting at 25 1/2" scale. I've always wanted a "student-size" Fender but haven't found one that I like and can afford. I recently bought a used Classic Vibe DuoSonic and converted it into a shorty with a 65 Musicmaster II 22 1/2" scale neck. It involved a bridge change and some tweaking, but it's worked out great....

Image
I know just enough to be dangerous....
User avatar
Thomas
.
.
Posts: 3591
Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2008 8:05 am
Location: Glasgow, UK

Post by Thomas »

That looks great!
User avatar
DGNR8
.
.
Posts: 4220
Joined: Sat Sep 30, 2006 2:51 am
Location: DC Area

Post by DGNR8 »

Dwarfed by that speaker!
Yell Like Hell
User avatar
brandon.
.
.
Posts: 402
Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 10:38 pm
Location: Hamilton, Ontario

Post by brandon. »

what's that cab?!
User avatar
taylornutt
.
.
Posts: 4908
Joined: Thu Sep 17, 2009 5:04 pm
Location: Dallas, TX

Post by taylornutt »

How's the intonation? The normal CV Duo Sonic neck is a conversion neck, so I would be concerned the scale and intonation will be off.

The only thing I don't like about the mid 60s Musicmaster/Duo Sonic necks was the size and placement of the Fender sticker. It makes the headstock look huge compared to the size of the letter.
J Mascis Jazzmaster | AVRI Jaguar | Tuxedo-stang |Fender Toronado GT |
Squier FSR Sparkle Jaguar | Squier CV Mustang |1971 Fender Bronco| Baja Telecaster |
User avatar
cur
.
.
Posts: 7298
Joined: Sun Jan 18, 2009 8:58 pm

Post by cur »

taylornutt wrote:How's the intonation? The normal CV Duo Sonic neck is a conversion neck, so I would be concerned the scale and intonation will be off.

The only thing I don't like about the mid 60s Musicmaster/Duo Sonic necks was the size and placement of the Fender sticker. It makes the headstock look huge compared to the size of the letter.
Check out the bridge he put on it. Extra long range saddles all the way to thee end.

Looks cool.

Image
Image
User avatar
Josh
The Curmudgeon
Posts: 5010
Joined: Mon Nov 17, 2008 7:11 pm
Location: George
Contact:

Post by Josh »

woah, good job on that! That's the way I'd of liked the CV duo sonics to look.
User avatar
spellcaster
.
.
Posts: 30
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 9:08 pm

Post by spellcaster »

Thanks guys! The reaction from people is one of the payoffs when a guitar gets built or modded. The towering cabinet is a 68 Dual Showman with two 15" JBL's that I use with my blackface Twin Reverb head.

I didn't realize when I started that the Squier neck was a conversion neck designed to be put on a body with 25 1/2" scale bridge placement. I talked to a guy who'd put a mid 60's Mustang neck on a 56 DuoSonic body successfully so I assumed it would work the other way as well. When I mounted the neck, I found I was short 3/8" of saddle travel. I found a bridge plate with the same string spread that was long enough front-to-back to allow for longer saddles and screws. The fact that it solved the non-compensated saddle issue was a bonus. So far, I've only intonated it by ear so I could test it, but I'll be sitting down with my Peterson Strobe tuner to dial it in this afternoon. Intonation definitely won't be a problem though.

Now that the DuoSonics done (at least for now), I can get back to my Thinline Cabronita build. This one's got a 71 Musicmaster 24" scale neck, Filtertron pickups, Villex pickup booster and rechargeable built-in wireless.

Image
I know just enough to be dangerous....