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ScottR

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Posts posted by ScottR

  1. That flame is looking hot. Is that another of your rescued restaurant table tops?

    SR

    Indeed it is Scott. this one, a drop top & a chunk of quilt are all I have left. think ill use the quilt for something for myself. the droptop went into a flying V i did for a guy. he ordered it on a monday & was playing it that saterday night at a gig :D its coming back for some polishing & photos in a few weeks.

    But the flame on this is coming out realy nice, actually got better when I bookmatched it B) .

    Any more builds in the near future from yerself ?

    That V sounds like a bloody fast build.

    Unless my powers of observation are faulty....and they often are, I'd say you hand carved (chiseled) the scoops on the cut outs on this. Man after my own heart. :D

    As for me, I dunno. I had a request for a build about a month ago. We spent about a week discussing details and then it got quiet. The customer is a friend of a friend and I have been assured that it is still on.....only delayed for a bit while he tries to sell a guitar to get the cash for this project. We'll see how it goes.

    SR

  2. couple new ideas here,

    My apologies for getting out of sorts when I read post #41, it blindsided me as a bit disrespectful toward my woodworking efforts and contribution to the industry. I'm not used to being discounted so bluntly. This is a kick-ass forum and I'm sure it doesn't happen much to anyone here.

    Sincerely,

    Josh

    I may be speaking out of turn here, but I'm pretty sure that was intended as a clever remark (read as an attempt at a joke) and not a slam towards what you are building.

    There have been plenty of flame wars here,but they tend to be more about disputed opinions. Issues with skills are almost always more constructive and typically involve suggestions for how to improve something that didn't go quite as planned. Outright dislike of something is typically stated as an opinion, like that doesn't work for me or it's not my cup of tea, but that's just me, or nice build but I just don't care for pointy guitars etc.

    Attempts at humor however, abound, and sometimes they are home runs and sometimes they fall flatter than a road kill armadillo.

    After all, with one noteable exception, we are all just excitable boys.

    SR

  3. Did you ever get the water thin on some wood that you didn't want it on and try sand it out? It takes a minute or 60. As far as for detail applications, I pout a little into the bottom of a dixie cup (it's amazing how long it will stay in liquid form when it's in a little puddle like that), and paint it on with a cheap fine tip artist's brush. The hairs in the tip will fuze together in seconds but it will still carry glue to where you want it. Mask off your work and be prepared to have to scrape the edge of the tape away. You may have to sand some lumps out when it's all said and done......and like all new procedures, test on scrap.

    SR

  4. Thanks and yes it turned out well.

    Its now got 2 coats of lacquer and will get 3 coats tomorrow then its a 21day cure. Photos tommorow.

    I've just had a thought. Can I enter this for the GOTM comp for say October when it will be complete?

    Yes you can....or any other month you so choose, it does not matter when it was completed.

    SR

  5. Your Dad sounds like one sharp cookie.

    I have run into solvent re-wetting and delayed out-gassing issues in my field too. (It's interesting to see the similarities in a clear coat for printing and one for wood working). I would never have guessed that the heat played a negative role. You would expect it to help expedite the evaporation of the solvents. Didn't I read a post from Perry some time ago saying he had built a heated drying room for just that purpose? Nevertheless, I can certainly see how a quick surface cure would trap solvents in deeper layers....and have indeed experienced just that thing in the printing world.

    SR

  6. Holy crap, what's that ridiculously glossy metallic looking beast in the background? That's not that black one you polished so much it looked like pewter a while back is it?

    I like the walnut headstock on this one. Are you putting the P-90 at the bridge? It looks like you've got the hummy drawn in the middle. Has a color been picked yet?

    SR

  7. Doh!

    I think I remember that guitar. I was thinking you were saying he owned the name....as in your Diablo humbuckers.

    And I was not considering dragon rasps. Just fold some canvas over the inside of your horns or use a coarse drum attachment for your drill. I know you don't consider this an option, but it only takes me 2 or 3 hours to carve and rough sand with palm gouges--those spoon shaped things you consider dangerous. :D

    Carry on, I'm looking forward to the final product on this.

    SR

  8. I just hate poking the horns with the point of a sharp rasp... little holes piss me off

    Grind away the part that pokes holes in the horns. You don't need that part. Sort of like smoothing one edge of a triangle file to dress fret ends with. Or get a drum rasp bit for your drill.

    The reason I carve my tops is because my friend (owns Diablo) told me that is what he wanted and I should do it on everything.

    He knew what he was talking about. 3 or 4 weeks ago I was out watching a band and the guitarist was playing a nice old Jackson (if there is such a thing). It was blue. But the way the lights reflected off that slab face just shouted: Cheap! Plain! Boring! to me. I love the way a tele sounds....but I'd much rather look at.....hold.....play one like that last one you made.

    Drak's flat faced masterpieces are a whole different animal. His finishes are so over the top good that they don't need carves or other individualistic treatments to set them apart.

    (owns Diablo)

    Really?

    SR

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