Jump to content

Peavey T-60 Project


Recommended Posts

This morning I got up and glued the top to the body. I checked out every side where the lacewood meets the maple top and I have no gaps. I used two scrap pieces to brace the top down in case the warping would cause the top to be raised from the body in the middle. I should know when I rout the pickup cavities, but I'm confident it's fine. The warping was very slight.

I have Labor Day (Monday) off work, so I'm going to run my router with a follower bearing around the body to have my final shape.

Gluingtoptobody.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Um, just a question: you gonna smooth out the lumps and bumps that the guitar's got pretty much all the way 'round the perimeter? Including but not limited to the entire lower bout, the waist, the horns, and particularly that treble-side sticky outey bit next the the neck pocket? Might be perspective, but the general shape looks way out of whack and balance to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Um, just a question: you gonna smooth out the lumps and bumps that the guitar's got pretty much all the way 'round the perimeter? Including but not limited to the entire lower bout, the waist, the horns, and particularly that treble-side sticky outey bit next the the neck pocket? Might be perspective, but the general shape looks way out of whack and balance to me.

Yes that will all be smoothed out. Thanks for the concern. I am going to have to fill in a lot of spots on this maple with epoxy. Luckily, the biggest spot is where the neck humbucker will go, so I'll rout the two pickup cavities first before I start epoxy filling.

Any suggestions with the expoxy? I think I've heard guys use a dropper or syringe. Does it darken the wood or prevent the oil or laquer from penetrating resulting in discoloration?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You really should have waited to bevel the edges after cleaning up the shape of the body.

Agreed. You dont look like youre using any templates. Im just hoping the neck fits in that pocket ok, its kind of rough. I wouldnt "clean it up" too much before you address how much room you have to work with. Without sounding like an ass, I also dont really understand the use of both spalted maple AND lacewood. Theyre just to different to be on the same guitar IMO.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You really should have waited to bevel the edges after cleaning up the shape of the body.

Agreed. You dont look like youre using any templates. Im just hoping the neck fits in that pocket ok, its kind of rough. I wouldnt "clean it up" too much before you address how much room you have to work with. Without sounding like an ass, I also dont really understand the use of both spalted maple AND lacewood. Theyre just to different to be on the same guitar IMO.

The neck fits perfectly in the pocket. I'm actually surprised with myself on that one.

I don't use any templates at all, besides printing out a picture enlarged to actual size, it's all free hand routing, drilling, sanding etc.

If the body shape looks a little off after the bevelling, not to worry, I'm sanding it all out making the edges smooth. It will all be rounded out.

I love the lacewood combo with this top, but it's not for everyone I guess.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's great that your neck fits perfectly, but you've still got a lot of work ahead on that body. Concentrate on getting the edge perfect, then re-bevel the edge. The bearing on the router bit is going to take any imperfection in the shape and amplify it right on the top of your guitar in that bevel.

If you can, try to use some kind of stationary drum sander to clean that up--either a drill press mounted one or an oscillating unit.

Good job on the neck pocket, now make it look good!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest AlexVDL

:D:D

Man, you didn't even cut out your template correctly... I can see the body edges and you cut the paper far from it on certain spots. I can see why your body looks so screwed up in my opinion. It was definately a bad thing to bevel the edges without smoothing the body outline. If you look at the body of the T60, the lower part is symmetrical, yours is all out of shape. PLEASE do the body ouline first before you do anything else on this guitar!!! I'm just trying to help you, I'm not dissing you... B)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Make a perfect drawing, cut it out perfectly, use it to make a plywood or MDF template that's dead-on accurate, use a router to trim down to the lines, and then re-bevel everything.

Like crafty said, a stanionary drum sander is your friend in this situation, although for convex curves (ie, everything but the inside of the cutouts and the waist area), a flat/belt/disc/block of wood sander is going to get you smoother results. Drums aren't great at dealing with convex curves.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...