Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Working late...

So Acoustic Corner can feel weird at night, alone.  Little creeks in the building, wind outside.  Never quite sure if you locked the door.

The perfect solution?

Bring your dog :-)   Maple likes to hang out at the ole' AC.  And at any sign of trouble, she'll let you know.  Like when some stranger tries the front door at 10:30 pm. 

In case that was you, she's a nice dog, but she was just trying to say, "Come back in the morning, we open at ten."

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

New bridge for a student cello

While never the most elegantly carved bridges, student bridges are always good practice to fit and set the string height.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

1961 D-18

I can bring ya'll up to speed on this old D-18.  So far, I've reglued the bridge, fit the ''Bridge Saver'' bridge plate plugs, reset the neck, and dressed the fingerboard.

It moved about 1/64" with string tension, so it's been given a slight .009" back bow at this step, some fret compression should help us come out with a nice 3-4 thousands relief.

Monday, November 11, 2013

1937 Dobro refret

All wrapped up.  Tons of vibe on this old guitar.

19 new frets

The new frets went in well, and sighting down the neck it looks like we got that really slight back bow.  Now onto the clockwork of dressing these frets out.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Ready for some frets

At this point the fingerboard has been dressed, and sanded to a 400 grit paper.  I've got the neck straight, and I'm hoping for the frets to give me a 2-3 thousandths back bow after they compress the neck.  The neck moves .007" with tension, so that's what will give the neck a nice slight relief.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Got the frets to pull out cleanly.

1937 Dobro refret

   Diving on this morning to a guitar that is certainly due to a refret.  I've worked on this guitar in the past, adding a pickup, and replacing the tuners.  The guitar has a little time off now, so it's as good a time as any to replace the old frets, and take out an up bow from the neck.

Stay tuned

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Build #6 Progress

After (another) long break from posting, I've decided this blog needs more attention.  I have a lot of content to put up soon, but for now here's a look at that guitar that got started a while ago.

Since I started this build, I've moved my shop to a new location.  I'm still in Black Mountain, but now live on the east side of town, in a small cabin surrounded by woods and mountains.  I'll post some pictures of the new shop soon.

The part of being a luthier I enjoy most is quite time spent working with hand tools.  The end graft of a guitar is something that can be done very quickly and accurately with a jig, and a router.  I'm not really a snob about using hand tools, and honestly if I had a jig setup for doing end grafts, I would just use it.  Anyway, after a long time of being a shelved project, hand cutting for the end graft was a nice way to get this build back in the works.



It certainly took some time to have crisp straight lines, and a flat bottom, but it was time I enjoyed spending.

And here's the end graft (padouk) glued in.  Soon it will be time to cut for binding, and do some miter joints.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

1937 Martin O-17

After a long time of not posting, I'm re-dedicating myself to this blog.  I was having some computer trouble, but now my girlfriend's spiffy Macintosh laptop is right by my chair, so I have no excuse.

Here's a repair that I did a while back.  I guess this instrument got played a lot, and wound up stuffed away in a closet somewhere in New York.  Finally a family member with an interest in guitar got his hands on it, and decided to get it fixed up, and playing well.

Sorry for the blurry photo, but there she is.  A 1937 Martin O-17.  Ben Brockway actually did the initial estimate, which addressed the frets, neck bow, neck angle, and the giant rib crack.


This is not something enjoyable to fix.  A completely cracked through rib, from headblock to tailblock.
Here's an inside view.  You can see that the linen patches didn't even try to stop the crack.  Wooden rib braces probably wouldn't have either.  In this case, the linen patches were a good thing, because they're easy to remove with warm water.  Therefore they didn't hold up the rib from being repaired.  Long story short, don't drop your guitar!

There were three main ideas for how to fix this giant crack.
1) Remove the back of the instrument, thus enabling vast control over the crack in order to achieve a near perfect alignment.  But with the risk of leaving scars, as guitar backs aren't made to be taken on and off.

2) Work in small sections and use CA glue.  This would have probably yielded a very good alignment, but would have certainly left a large scar in the finish, even working as cleanly as possible.  

3) Work in large sections (3) and use special clamps (shown above with the tuners) and turn buckle cauls through the sound hole, and get the alignment as close as possible.

I chose #3, and tried many clamping variations until I finally got it.  In the end the whole crack went together well, and needed only a tad bit of flushing and finish touch up.  Not too bad for a crack that had been open for the better part of 50 years.

After the rib crack was reinforced with cleats and new linen patches, it's time to do this instruments neck reset.  The hide glue Martin used gave way to steam after maybe a minute.

I start with getting the new angle established, and then fit the heel perfectly back to the body.

Awww yeah.  Lookin good.

Now I get the joint itself fitting well again, using some full length mahogany shims.  Chalk fit that thing back together, and...
Mix up some fresh hide glue for good measure.  Pre-war Martin's deserve the best!
Not too many things get your blood pumping like watching hide glue ooze out of a tight dovetail.
Always a good feeling when it's still right after the clamps come off!
The frets gotta go!  Pulling frets out neatly always fills the repair room with that odd smell of "concentrated antique store."
Impressive stuff here.  This neck only moves .005" under string tension, and over 80 years of string tension have only warped it .005".  
All it takes to nail that perfect .002" relief is to put in about .003" of back bow.  I feel comfortable doing this, because I'll be putting in frets with the same tang size.
It really puts a smile on your face when frets seat perfectly.  I checked about 4 times before I realized, I didn't have to do any fret leveling at all.
Time now to make the new saddle.  Because somebody decided to glue in the old saddle, I get the pleasure of sawing it in half, and carving the pieces out.
Don't glue saddles in folks, saddle gluers go to the special hell, with child molesters and people who talk during movies.
After a new nut and saddle, this guitar is a pleasure to play, and really great to listen to also.