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verhoevenc

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Posts posted by verhoevenc

  1. Hahahaha, no, I figured out what he was talking about. He can't sell me FULL UNLAMINATED SHELL BLANKS, without some federal liscence on my part. HOWEVER, he can sell me laminated shell blanks, I was just TOTALLY lost. So yeah, I can get laminated shell blanks, which is all I need. I think inlayusa.com calls their laminates "top-strat", and then they have little veneers (way too thin for me) called like microveneer or something.

    But yeah... how dangerous is the laminated stuff? Even if I'm just cutting it with a knife to inlay? Do I really need a resperator? Where do I get one? How much? And I take it I shouldn't do this inside in my bedroom....?

    Chris

  2. I was talking with a guy from Inlay USA and he said they won't sell you shell blanks because they're hazardous and cause cancer and that the FEDs monitor that STUFF like crack cocaine!

    Chris

    PS: But good to know stone is no harder to work with :D

    I'm hopefully going to be doing my first inlay soon.

    Language Warning

  3. I was wondering a couple things about all this "recon stone" stuff being used since you can't really use real shell blanks and are forced to use that thin veneer shell alot.

    My question was, if you're inlaying this stone material, and it's not level with your fingerboard... wil STONE sand down flush? IE: are the inlaying techniques the same for the stone as they are with shell, etc.?

    Chris

  4. How come I can only find these REALLY thin veneer things like at the maui site? They've got all the colors that I would ever want, but they're all .15mm thick?! You don't even have to inlay something that thin! Where can I get all these sweet colors but with actual inlay materials?

    Chris

  5. Yeah, I'll agree that a fixed base is better than a plunge base for a dremel (ie: stewmac over the dremel one I bought).

    HOWEVER if you read up on the dremel one I got, it may be a plunge base, HOWEVER you can lock it in two different plundge depths. SO I can just plunge down and lock it before I even start cutting, and tada, fixed base.

    Chris

  6. Hahahaha, no I didn't get an expensive plane because I've never used one yet, I got that one to try it out,s ee what I do and don't like about it, and hten go up from there. And plus, I don't plan to use it that much on this guitar anyways. My spruce top is on 3/16" thick, so the most carving I'm gunna be doing is a mere 1/16".

    Chris

  7. Yeah, I ended up getting hte reconditioned router, got the dremel from the factory direct site, and got a MUCH better base for it than stewmac from the factory site too for $24! Sorry all you guys that don't think I need a router, i SURELY do, I've decided after building my last guitar with table saws and band saws and all that stuff that I'm going the router+template way now.

    Here's what I got in the end, after losing some stuff... adding some stuff... finding better prices:

    Stewmac.com

    Inlay Bits: $9.71

    Template: $5.55

    Binding Bits: $14.98

    Graphtech 1 13/16 Nut: $6.53

    Frets: $18.36

    Fretboard: $18.36

    Trussrod 18": $15.09

    Binding: $4.75

    Scrapers: $5.98

    Purfling: $4.75

    Total: $115.31

    www.maui.net:

    Sample Pack: $10

    Dremeltools.com-

    Dremel: $69.95

    Dremel Base: $24.79

    Collet Set: $5.70 (so I could get free shipping, cause if not shipping would have been more than $5.70)

    Total: $100.44

    Amazon-

    Router: $139.15

    Table: $62.95

    Digital Calipers: $26.99

    Small Plane: $7.95

    Clamps: $49.94

    Total: $321.99

    Router Bits.com-

    Bit 3021: $27.20

    Total: $32.19

    Total: $579.93

    And that's WITH shipping, the other quotes weren't. So I think getting MORE for about $200 under my previous quota isn't half bad :D

    Chris

  8. This was my quota:

    Router: $209.99

    Bits: Set $48.40

    Template: $5.55

    Table: $62.95

    Dremel: $104.39

    Dremel Base: $50.95

    Dremel Edger: $28.25

    Binding Bits: $18.89

    Inlay Bits: $16.95 + $15.95

    Graphtech 1 13/16 Nut: $4.92

    Frets: $3.11 x3

    Inlay: $39.96

    Fretboard: $18.36

    Trussrod 18": $15.09

    Binding: $4.90

    Scrapers: $5.98

    Digital Calipers: $50.98

    Routerbits.com Bit 3021: $27.20

    Total: 738.99

  9. I think pulfering is against the law. Ron's purfling is sure cool though!  LOL

    I agree, I really want to do purfling now.

    Have you guys seen his inlayed freackin tops? Just amazing. He has a koa top inlaid into a limba body. That made me pass out the first three times I looked at it. Wow!!!

    I'm SLIGHTLY confused as to what this is... got a link to this particular masterpiece for further exploration?

    Chris

  10. So yeah... finally got into the woodshop at my university after much toil and trouble drawing out SEVERAL plans to prove compitency, etc. and that I wasn't just messing around in there. So yeah, I get into the shop... they don't have the MAIN tool I was planning to use. No router table... no bearing bits... they claim no bits to go 1 9/16" deep (the depth of the hollow of my body) even with multiple passes! Oh yeah, and no dremel, nothing like it. So yeah... back to square one: finding somewhere to build. I guess I'll just end up buying a router (Bosch from amazon) and a Grizzly H3114 table for it, plus a stewmac dremel and then all the router bits and do-hickeys so that I can actually build this thing. Cause I mean it's not like I can turn back now, I've got all the wood, bridge, nut, etc. It's crazy though, for the router, table, dremel, bits, and other pieces I need to make this guitar happen I'm adding another $700 on top of the wood I already bought, and the baby grand bridge (which is REALLY expensive too).

    So yeah, templates will be built at school... everything else will be done at home outside in my yard (house isn't big enough for a shop room... and since it's a bad neighbourhood I'll have to bring the stuff in and out of the house every time i use it :D ) with my dremel and router.

    Wish me luck Boys,

    Chris

  11. One of the things that really got me when going around his site, that I SURELY plan to do at some point, is how easy pulfering is (looks at least).

    I guess I'm just dense, but until I read a build documentary on his site, I would have thought to pulfer, you'd route just like binding, and then BIND with abalon and hten bind AGAIN over that with a similar wood. But the way he does it... obviously makes my pre-conceptions VERY foolish! All you gotta do is use that stewmac dremel base with the edge thing! Genious!

    Also, one of my main things I look at on guitars (semi-hollow and hollow atleast) is the sound hole. And he has some BEAUTIFUL leaf and shark, etc. shaped holes which I fell in love iwth!

    Chris

  12. OK, I'm just putting this out there as a service to anyone else up to this day that has never seen these guitars for one reason or another.

    go see www.thornguitargallery.com

    I just did for the first time and I honestly s$*t my pants!

    The most most outrageously glamourous guitars I've ever seen, beauty and elegance unmatched!

    These things are so outragiously elegant they balong in the Baroque era!

    Chris

    PS: After being on this site a long time I've found SO many great builders like Thorn and Myka and Draks... how come none are even mentioned on Ed Roman's "World's Best Guitars" site? Maybe that should tell him something about his choice in "the best guitars" which include his own POS's and not these guys'. That's right ED, take you down a notch.

  13. OK, I just KINDA figured it out... I was measuring the angle that the STRINGS were making downward towards the nut....

    HOWEVER, this ISN"T the same as the neck's angle because of the fact the neck starts out with a string action of 1/16" at the nut, and becomes 1/8" at the 22nd fret. THEREFORE the angles aren't the same.

    But this arises a new problem.... the fretboard, as you go along the incline is getting FARTHER away from the strings... and that would mean that the angle the fretboard is at is LESS than the angle the strings is at though....

    IE: More Problems!

  14. Ok, i JUST did it again, and if you make a right triangle out of it using the top of the bridge, a line parallel to the body at the hieght of the bridge all the way out to the nut, and then a line from the nut to this parallel line you get: hypotenus (strings; ie: from bridge to nut line) 25", then the line from the nut to the line parallel to the body starting at the bridge's hieght is 13/32. If you use sin to find the angle (the one between the bridge hieght parallel line and the line from bridge to nut) you get that angle to be .93 degrees. WAY different from what the angle calculator link says to do.

    With my angle, i can measure (cause it's all to scale) that string hieght at the nut is 1/16", and string hight at the 22nd fret (last fret) is 1/8".

    (And remember I can always RAISE the bridge...)

    I'm SO confused?!?!?!!?

    Chris

  15. Ok, then something is not right, cause I drew it out and got an angle where if the bridge is at it's LOWEST hieght, the action is too low (cause I figure I can always raise the bridge.) And drew it out and everything, and it's not too low as to not be playable. I used triangles to figure everything out and it came out to having a neck degree/angle of 1. However, this calculator says I should have something like 1.68 degrees? So who do I believe? I physical drawing I have in front of me, or the calculator?

    Chris

    PS: The calculator says that if I raise my bridege I need to angle it MORE, whereas in MINE I'm gunna have to slightly raise it to REACH the 1 degree angle properly?!

  16. Ok, I drew everything out and I'm wondering if this sounds right to anyone?

    The bridge rises a total of .5" above the body (but can be raised), the heel of the neck has a total thickness of 1 3/8", 1/4" of which rises above the body at the end of the fingerboard. It's set a total of 5.5" into the body. At the other end of the neck (the nut side) the neck is 13/16" thick, 3/16" of which is the fingerboard's wood, and then the nut rises an additional 1/16" above the fingerboard. With this I've found that the angle of the neck pocket should be 1 degree... giving the strings a rise of 1/8" at the 12th fret (with the bridge in the lowest hieght, but like said before, it can be raised).

    For those who wanna know, the bridge is a Hipshot Baby Grand.

    Anybody see anything wrong with ANY of that information? (this is my first time angling a neck, my last guitar was a neck-thru with no angled neck, and the bridge was just recessed).

    Thanks in advance,

    Chris

  17. Yeah, UMiami has one, and I'm attempting to get into it to use it, but it's in the Engineering school, and you have to get STRICT permission to use it if you're not one. So I'm making my building a guitar a "project of cost analysis and business" lol. HOWEVER it takes awhile (in the process now), and also somehow they set the place on fire.... so it's been down for some time now and I don't know when I'll get in lol.

    Chris

  18. Oh, i know, even BEFORE the corvette one you showed they've done another one with an actual 2 tone red and white cut-away on a real Les paul that i like better (modelled after a 59' corvette). But I'm doing an old mustang because my father has one and this would make him smile like a mad man. Trust me, I know i'm not the first do do a guitar modelled after a car. There have been MANY. I AM however the first to do a mustang that I know of???

    Chris

    And yeah, I haven't decided on the headstock yet, that's the headstock on the guitar i used to photoshop over, not the one i'm gunna use.

    As for the strings hieght, thanks i actually hadn't thought of that :D

    But yeah... like you said man, it's just a photoshop now, I've gotta see if I can even build a hollow semi first.

    And no, the pickups will have mounting rings, this is VERY rough you guys lol

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