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mistermikev

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Everything posted by mistermikev

  1. hehe... just tape! than again stripes might make it go faster... hmmm!
  2. right on. tru oil seems to burn thru incredibly easy, is a fickle but handsome oil for sure!
  3. a mere 165 for a neck? (like I said, rockafeller!) is beautiful tho... would love to try that someday. lot there. I hear ya on the 'respect for ingenuity. Would never buy it myself but there is admittedly a lot of thought that goes into how to get it all into an efficient box and such. My wife once brought home an ikea hat/coat rack... it's all solid wood, but it is crap. I have reglued and strengthened so many parts of it... and told her NEVER buy from that place again. So I guess I have a vendetta! it's hurt me so many times! so your vote on veneer is poplar is ok, and it seems the general consensus is so. I appreciate you weighing in on it. that said it also sounds like you are saying dying walnut(for instance) black, then glueing it up and sanding it back - it should remain quite black? seems like that'd be a better option anyway. I would think that even w/o dye, once you get some oil finish on walnut it'll look 'black enough' anyway. is a good point about oak veneer... probably don't want to hang on to a lot of that for a long time. thank you for the response!
  4. for the record I did the glue up: thank on to building/testing a jackson je1200 preamp for this (sounds great!):
  5. 400 grit on tru oil? that would be a direct route to burn thru for me! looks amazing. nice work!
  6. always. The folks over at mylespaul convinced me not to because there was a consensus that it wasn't needed... but also the point was made that the clamps might fight each other and the most important pressure needed to be downward... I am rarely the person who you should follow! haha! other good ideas were to use a rubber tube to go up over the headstock and all. it's all good and I imagine it wouldn't hurt to use some sort of pressure that way but I found it easy enough to get my neck down in the pocket. I scored the sides to create glue channels and had left the inside pocket edges short for glue escape route... that actually made the neck go in pretty easy despite tight fit.
  7. right on. was just reading that it tends to turn right at the 10 year mark. it looks real dark in the pic but you know... hard to tell from pics. look fwd to seeing the purple.
  8. Oh, I think I could do it to twenty seven strokes too much. actually, thinking it would be a lot easier to sand a pickup ring flat... then glue veneer to the top of it. that's probably in my future somewhere. I could see using a router on 3/4 stock and getting the shape right... then hot glue some popsicle sticks to the top, take a flex saw and cut the back off. I bet that is something where I'd want to do 10 of them and probably 5 would make it thru the process. something to think about anyway. edit: sorry for detail. I'm done.
  9. so asked over at mylespaul as well but... this is the best I can figure to get a clamp pulling my neck into the body. see the block there that is clamped to the neck... then the long clamp across. obviously clamping before you finish that area might be a nice trick but I figured it's hard to finish once it's on. thoughts? cka
  10. did my wireup for the tuxedo... etched some random pcbs for everything from a guitar mounted brian may treb boost to a haz lab bass pre to amz mini boost and ovation piezo preamp and even some labeled pickup panels... did my truss channel for the les flawes... did my fretboard truss access and glued her on using hot glue gun and blocks to get it center. worked pretty good. also got my frets on...shaped the neck for the les flawes using the facets method loosely as I always do... just using 3 measurements to do 3 facets... and I come out with the profile matching w/o even trying...
  11. yeah, even 1/4 x 1.5" x 3' ebony is going to be somewhere around $60 a strip and lam is probably still $30+ I would guess. Just wouldn't use it unless a build really wouldn't look right w/o it esp since as a veneer strip - you wouldn't be able to distinguish it from dyed walnut. surely not building entire necks out of it like @komodo (I hear he's related to the rockafellers)! jk K... envious.
  12. ah, right, that's purple heart that turned to brown heart then?
  13. right... small = more difficult. I can think of sev ways I'd cut it... including yours... but I suspect the difficult part is getting straight lines with a scroll saw, or not busing it with a router.
  14. wow, I would love to try that but it seems like a lot of work. respect.
  15. thanks Norris. I have a what's left of a 8/4 x 13" x 12' stick of it in my garage along with some 12/4. the delta lectric, and sweet spot blonde builds were all cut from that stick. I suspect that a 1.75" solid body of that is gonna make a guitar fall in the 7.5-8.5lb range. it has bee my understanding that khaya mahog can be light OR heavy - this one being on the lighter side of heavy and very orange. I've been waiting for a new shipment of mahog at my local spot to see if I can pick thru and find a lighter 13" board but it's hard to judge weight on something that big. I could go buy some stuff from a few spots that I know is light, but I'm in no hurry and I prefer the prices at my local spot.
  16. right on welcome. I waited far too long to start building because I had ideas of it when I was 16 and assembled lots of parts guitars but never did a scratch build until 30 yrs later. so joining boards sounds like it's going to play a big part in your build. what tools? you a hand planer type or router type or jointer type? big fan of chambered as I'm a big fan of light guitars - everything I've built so far has been chambered as I have yet to find wood that is light enough to go fully solid. look fwd to seeing your build pics.
  17. it's a math formula. it occurs in nature all over the place... is used for fractals... and a lot of digital media courses will tell you that it is a recipe for things 'looking good'. basically a+b/a = a/b. at least that's my understanding of it. not to be confused with the godin ratio... which is the number of guitars you have that are not made by godin vs the number of guitar you have that are made by godin.
  18. while I think diamonds could be a pretty interesting effect... I'm primarily interested in simple designs. did spark something tho... going to go look at some pool queues (or cues for those not into the levity thing) .
  19. while that does appear to be the case... if we simply combined the two 1/8" pieces into 2 1/4" piece each... the ratio is still there while the magic is gone, at least for me. I 'spose if we add in the requirement of asymmetry... then yes. so it def proves a good guideline but not a guarantee for me iow pretty sure if you start dividing pieces up on this... it's going to get too busy real fast while maintaining that ratio trying to put it in a box... for some reason I'm really attracted when there are exactly three sizes and one of those sizes is really small... and there aren't too many pieces. also, thank you for the response biz.
  20. so I have been looking around at differing approaches to neck laminations... started building a photoshop doc just to look at the differing possibilities. I am aware that some folks do tapered, some don't. all good. this guy says it is better if you align your laminations closer with the strings: http://wynguitars.com/guitars-in-progress-film-at-11/ I am also aware that there are many differing combos of different sized wood strips... and have found a few I really like. wanted to catalog some here and ask for input on possible cool variations. this is a cool and interesting resource from alembic - suggestion "different sounds from different combos" but more importantly... cover a lot of ground as far as different possible looks: http://www.alembic.com/info/wood_neck.html like this one quite a bit - very simple but nice. it's easy to go over the top IMO with too many wood types and sizes: this one is simple and lovely but more because of the wood than the actual pattern: but so far this is my absolute favorite... just love it. I don't even know why. again, focused on the pattern as opposed to the wood: this one is mind blowing but just not interested in the extra work for a scarf: so... what pattern do you like? Can you add to the collection here - any pics of nice patterns?
  21. must not be that deep then - I'm assuming you mean by hand and NOT with a power sander or anything. If so, I'd say 'go for it' probably not much risk if you are sanding thru easily altho with a neck there is always some risk that removing the finish would cause the wood to draw/release moisture and change.
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