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Johnny Foreigner

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Posts posted by Johnny Foreigner

  1. also caveat emptor on Virtual Village.

    They list stuff they don't have on hand. So you buy it on ebay, pay them through paypal, they get the money. Then they email you to say the item is out of stock, it will be 2-3 weeks til it's back in stock.

    cowboys.

  2. thanks Scott. Into the final furlong....

    at times I wish I'd chosen a simpler design - a tele clone or something - but I've learned SO much by making this super complicated with the carve, jack cut, weird fret markers, direct mount pups, piezo, wiring, etc.

    anyway, time to idiot-check my finishing schedule (largely nicked off of the Stewmac site as I'm using their colortone products)

    1. Raise the grain on the top with water, then gently sand back (I assume using pretty low grit)

    2. Sand everything to 220

    3. stain back, neck and back of HS black. stain top and front of HS dark blue (not black)

    4. sand back top and top of HS. Stain blue.

    5. marvel at lovely flamy 3d top for a bit

    6. use grain filler on mahogany bits (back and sides) but not on maple bits (top and top of HS). Sand to 320.

    7. 12 - 16 sanding sealer coats - no less than 3 hours apart, no more than 48 hours apart (do I need to empty and refill the gun between coats or can i leave the sanding sealer in the sealed can??)

    8. wait 24 hours

    9. 9 - 12 top coats - no less than 3 hours apart

    10. wait a week

    11. wet sand, starting at 1200, moving up as high as my micromesh pads go (12000)

    12. buff out with fine polishing compound.

    all make sense?? I know I've seen more specific buffing tips elsewhere on here which I need to dig out.

  3. inspired somewhat by RestorationAD's 7-string, I'm contemplating a future build where the focus is very clearly on being as thin and light as possible.

    I think that will probably mean a basswood body with maple cap, but I'm unsure about what wood to use for the neck.

    What's the lightest wood (or combination of woods - i'd be interested in a multi-ply also) you think you can 'get away with' for a neck - so it's still strong enough (possibly with double truss rod or TR plus two CF rods). obviously the lighter the neck, the lighter/thinner the body can be without neck dive.

    it will be 6 string, 25" scale, same basic shape (and same HS shape) as my first build (http://projectguitar.ibforums.com/index.php?showtopic=42864&view=findpost&p=468147)

  4. thanks customguitar - it's been really nice to get back to it this weekend. there's definitely something addictive about the process and something deeply satisfying the presses both my man button and my musician button at the same time.

    more progress today.

    the clamps came off the neck and I was able to site the bridge - it lines up *almost* exactly so it sits dead on the center line and the outside strings line up with the fretboard all the way along. for someone of my limited attention to detail, that's a big win.

    last major job before finishing:

    34021_411514842166_560627166_4939121_4052152_n.jpg

    on someone's recommendation i ages ago bought a cheap angle grinder and flap disc. made the job a lot easier.

    It's not the cleanest or prettiest heel/neck transition, but it's relatively smooth

    34021_411514847166_560627166_4939122_1077761_n.jpg

  5. two and a bit months later..... I finally found some time to venture back into the basement.

    installed brass inserts in the pup routs:

    34172_411151457166_560627166_4928699_2520158_n.jpg

    so I can direct mount the pups. had to drill out the 'ears' on the pups a little for this:

    34172_411151447166_560627166_4928697_236986_n.jpg

    and spent several hours sitting in the sun with an extension lead powering my soldering iron to get all this sorted:

    34248_411151532166_560627166_4928701_2589461_n.jpg

    and routed the battery box

    34248_411151537166_560627166_4928702_7556355_n.jpg

  6. got a little work done on this week while focusing on trying to finish up my first build.

    I cracked the initial body glueup and did the router-as-jointer trick. seemed to work well and the new glue line looks a lot tighter.

    cut the pieces for the scarf on the neck, using a left-over piece of figured maple as a nice little accent piece:

    36646_411151997166_560627166_4928706_726586_n.jpg

    and glued it up

    36646_411152012166_560627166_4928709_5577792_n.jpg

    more to come as the other build wraps up.

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