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Miro

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Posts posted by Miro

  1. BuildYourGuitar.com has a fret calculator in the PDF format. It's free. It is a must-have for anyone who make their own necks. Hey! It's simple to define scale: it's the distance between the bridge and the capo on the headstock. The frets are there for you to guide yourself when playing. Hey, I have a question: let's say I have a longer scale, and a longer fretboard, how can I add more frets? Like, 26 or 28 (yes, really trebly)? Thanx
  2. Hmmm, I didn't quite understood you, but, you want do route cavities for the pickups so they don't need the pup' guard? I do them with a hand drill, a chisel, and lots of sanding after... (make some holes with the drill and route with the chisel, then sand a lot to smooth out)

    Make the routes smaller, and progress until the final shape of the pups (so you don't have any holes when finished...)

    Hope it helps! C ya!

  3. Hey! Welcome to the forum!!! I'm 17 too, and I don't have the half of the equipment that you do :D. Don't folloy me yet, wait for others (like LGM itself or Maiden69) but, I've painted and finished until now two guitars (and I'm making my own now). I go through this:

    - Sand the body from 80 grit and progress to 320;

    - Apply a sanding sealer (I brush varnish... medieval huh?! :D);

    - Sand again with a 320 grit;

    - Apply the paint or burst you want (rattlecan or brush itself...);

    - Scuff sand with 320 grit paper;

    - Apply the finishing coats of VARNISH with BRUSH (at least, in Brazil, they are very good! Half polyurethane compound... big shine...); apply 2 to 3 coats a day, and wait two hours between them;

    - Flat sand with 400 grit;

    - 3 coats again;

    - Flat sand with 600 grit;

    - 3 more coats...;

    - Flat sand with 800 grit;

    - Buff with buffing compound (the hard one), can be made by hand (I do...);

    - Buff with the medium compound (gives a great mirror and shine surface);

    - If you want even more gloss, buff with the fine compound!;

    Well, hope it helps you dude! A small note on "flat sand": you should sand until no "shiny spots" are visible! Well, c ya!

  4. :D haha, after two hours looking at a mother-of-pearl inlay on my guitar, trying to figure something cool and cheap, I got this method:

    You need:

    - Transparent glue (any that gets hard when dry)

    - Purple or glitter (I'm from Brazil, I dont know how they call that out there, it's a lot of very small metallic "dots" of any color... most used on children's school work)

    Do it:

    - fill the inlay a little with glue and some 'purple'

    - put glue over the 'purple' and more 'purple'

    - do it again

    - wait until it dries (24 hours) and check out

    In the end, the inlay gets really shiny when light bounces over it. Comments please. C ya! :D

  5. :D "what?! did he drinked mushroom tea? some pot? or is he crazy?!" that's what you'll think after my question: does anyone know how to build an harp? not the big ones, but those just as the size of a guitar body or smaller (does anyone remember Mime from Asgard's saga, from the Saint Seiya anime???). Anything? Thanx in advance!
  6. Hmm, I don't buy wire for PUP winding on luthiers. Go to any eletronics shop and ask for a #43 wire roll (the gauge do affects the sound, #43 is used by Seymour Duncan).

    I have a table of various PUPs specifications (like wire gauge, insulation, magnet types and the number of turns on the bobin) if you want just send me a PM! C ya!

  7. yes, it is ok to spray the primer and then the paint without stripping away the old color. I do this all the time and gets very good! You should only take the finish off if you plan on having the natural wood visible somewhere on the body. Yes, I'm money limited as you. Hope it helps, c ya!

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