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ADFinlayson

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Everything posted by ADFinlayson

  1. 5lb that's quite impressive. I don't think I've managed to even get one of my semi hollow builds close to that.
  2. The last few weeks seem to have been fairly unproductive in the workshop due to work/life. The green tobacco one above is waiting for pickups which might be another week or two out, The ebony one finally has it's replacement p90 which sounds fab - I'll do some pics and demo of that one. But nothing else has gone on really so I thought I'd make some progress on the Korina one. First job was neck carving - I don't think I've talked much about carving lately but my method has changed a bit over the last 4 or 5 builds. I've gone back to using a shinto rasp and shaping a profile around the 1st fret and 15th, then I use a carving knife to shape the heel and volute transitions. I really like this method of carving, the knife can take loads or a little material depending on whether I use the wider or thin end of the blade and there is no sawdust Then I went back to the shinto to remove the bulk of the waste from the middle before using a no4 hand plane to even it out - not something I've done before but it works really nicely to get a perfectly level neck shaft with no dips, where I used to spend quite some time marking out the high spots with a pencil and doing spot carving and sanding. I will make a point of getting some pics/footage of that technique on the next build. Almost forgot to mention, I've just got myself a pattern makers vice. Wow it's like an extra pair of hands. I've been after one for a while but struggled to justify the cost as they're over the VAT threshold if I ordered from stewmac and would be close to £200 by the time I've got it home. Another builder friend of mine mentioned they had them on offer at Axminster £99 incl delivery down from £150 so very happy with that purchase. After carving, I got the neck glued up last night and it remained clamp for close to 24 hours, no reason for that other than I didn't manage to get out to the shop until this evening. Glue up went well, really happy with the neck joint on this one. I hadn't decided whether I was going to go for 2 P90s or another PH build so I had left the bridge pickup route. So made up my mind and got that done this evening, then got the studs in and did a test fit of the bridge. Not sure if I've mentioned before but I recently got the stewmac p90 template and their 3/8" bearing bit, my p90s fit much more nicely now - the American covers do anyway (this one will be getting black covers, knobs and switch). I need to spend a good hour on sanding and then it's on to finish. I'm thinking that a trans yellow might look cool on this one and was mulling over whether to stain it yellow then seal, grainfill and clear or to spray a yellow tint and I remembered @komodo's metal tele which looks really cool. So I think I might just steel Jeff's idea. I'm thinking I will spray a flash coat or two to seal, then use a black grainfiller before shooting some yellow to taste, then clear. But I want to do my usual lacquer to oil transition at the neck heel so I might see if I can blend yellow to natural there too with the distinct possibility of sanding through if I'm unlucky.
  3. Absolutely agree, but my rationale for taking a slice off and reusing it is that (even with a veneer) I've got a bandsaw capable and that slither I take off without other wise end up in the dust collector. Or could otherwise be used for control covers, headstock veneer etc.
  4. I was going to to suggest the same thing as @curtisa I did something similar with some epically heavy korina, I didn't use a veneer but I just sliced 1/4" off to top of each piece (2 piece blank) and treated it as a it's own top and I hid the join with binding. You could do that with the addition of the veneer, no one will ever know. In addition to chambers, you can always oversize your control cavity and make your pickup routes extra deep, they won't make much of a difference on their own but every little helps.
  5. The babicz tele bridge has a similar design in the way the saddles are locked down, bit of a PITA to adjust tbh.
  6. Thanks @henrim, yes grey is quite a difficult one to actually get to stay grey. I've got a few different black dyes and I find Crimson dye seems to go red when it's sanded back or pulled back with water, Liberon black dye seams to go quite blue and so does Angelus dye, the carbon black powder I used on this one is the only colour I've got that seems to stay that neutral grey colour, obviously the colour of the wood makes a huge difference here but I do think that the acetone seemed to have a slight bleaching affect too. I need to do a bit of experimenting with that.
  7. Tom picked his guitar up on Friday and he's very happy with it. So I'm happy too
  8. The blemishes you notice will be invisible to 99% of players that look at it. Get some strings on it.
  9. Agree with all of the above, and that's the rationale for using purple. However, it has turned slightly green. accentuated by the blue hue in my workshop lighting but it's definitely there. Annoyingly this wasn't visible after the sealer coat which is where a colour change normally occurs or even after the burst. Only once I'd built up 5 or 6 coats of clear did I start to notice it. I don't hate it so I'm not going to do anything rash like sand it all off and start again, but I have learnt a lesson about diluting angelus purple as a base colour. This is just off the buffer so it's ready to be put together,
  10. I like 8 bomb, he has loads of really useful info that I've learnt a lot from and I used his grainfiller recipe on this one a couple of years ago. The only difference was that I stained the guitar red before applying the filler instead of tinting it red with lacquer - I wasn't comfortable spraying tints at the time. When it comes to guitar finishing, I think 8bomb and Freddy Gabersek are my two favourites on youtube, I must have watched Freddy's les paul series 10 times. Yeah I'm liking shaders the more I use them, but what I'm not keen on with all this vintage correct stuff is that shaders tend to hide the nice figure in the wood the more they're applied, like a traditional tobacco burst for example, it's pretty much solid black up by the toggle/horns where as I want to try to get a balance between a sprayed burst and popping as much of the figure as I can. So using a combo of stains, sand back and shader seems to work well. Going too high contrast on the stains though can have the affect of making it "still" so there is no chatoyance at all - my old fire red burst PRS for example had deep red colour with thick black lines in the flame, but there was no movement at all so it might as well have been veneered ply. I seem to have got lucky on this one, there is some fairly high contrast in places but there is also still loads of movement going on - that's what I'm striving for anyway. The other benefit to using a bit of dye with a sand back, I see all those scratches I missed and can get them before lacquer goes on.
  11. Forgot to post yesterday, also filmed the last clear coat going on after the burst so you can see it pop
  12. Oh I see, yes that's the style of tenon I'm using - I always thought it was called a dovetail tenon as it's tapered. I could do with some more clamps so I might see if I can get some that I can flip into spreader clamps. Good shout. Got the burst on and a coat of clear to protect it, bit unorthodox but I like it. Taping off the f-hole was a bastard.
  13. Got the neck glued on this one this arvo. I noticed a little hairline gap on the bass side so I introduced the extra clamp which gave me a bit of squeeze out along that line so I think I'm ok now. Unlike most of my previous builds, I did all the fretwork including polishing prior to fitting the neck. I've decided that this is the way forward from now on - It's way easier to get the dressing file to the high frets on a singlecut with no body to worry about and there is less chance of damaging finish. Also, I'm using my buffing arbour to buff frets now too This is sooo much faster than using the dremel and I didn't even bother taping off the fretboard, Obviously it would be a no go with maple binding or a maple board, but for rosewood or ebony, it polishes up the fretboard really nicely. Really looking forward to getting some lacquer on this one tomorrow, with any luck I'll get a coat of clear down as a base coat, get a burst on it and then one final coat to lock it in. I am just a little bit dubious about bursting near the f-hole, I think it will be a bit to tape off and to clean up any overspray.
  14. Nowhere other than the knowledge that purple + yellow = brown. Using alcohol dye as the substrate and water-based as the main colour tends to give a bit more contrast between the hard and soft grain though and building a colour by layering two colours can give more interesting tones than if I just blended yellow to brown. I've tested going the other way, waterbased first then alcohol based on top but it doesn't seem to give the same result. Also, the grain needs to be raised to get the alcohol to really soak in so I go over the top with a damp rag just before applying the purple. What I have since discovered is that the angelus purple, goes quite blue when diluted heavily, so that will be how I managed to introduce some green when I mixed in some yellow. I also hadn't tested mixing angelus yellow with angelus purple, I just did that bit off the cuff because I didn't like the diluted purple on it's own. That'll teach me not to do a tester. Doh.
  15. A few coats of sealer on at lunchtime and I seem to have been lucky re the green. Will hopefully get a brown burst on it over the weekend.
  16. well if it is, it might all be sanded off and begun again. I'm not convinced though - purple was the base colour and purple and yellow nearly always make brown. We'll find out tonight and with any luck you won't get an opportunity to say I told you so
  17. Got a bit of stain on this one tonight. Started off with a light brown by mixing a heavily diluted purple angelus with a dash of yellow angelus although once dry it came out a bit greener than planned. Then I sanded that back so it's mostly just in the grain. Then I stained a purple teardrop. If my brown had turned out to be a bit less green, I might have been tempted to leave it this way. Bit "Hulk" though. Then I knocked that back a bit with 320 to bring out some more of the figure in the darkest area and went over it with 2 coats of Crimson waterbased yellow I seem to have lost a bit of my fade here around the pot holes but I'm putting that down to the fact there isn't as much flame here and that's predominantly where the darks are sitting. I'm going to give it a subtle dark burst so hopefully that will even it up a bit. Then finally tonight I sanded the edges with 120-320 to get the natural binding rolled over. Interested to see what sealer will do to it, might bring out the purples a bit more, hopefully it doesn't bring out any more green
  18. Got the body sanded on the maple one tonight and a coat of sanding sealer on the back and sides so I can apply some grainfiller without staining the maple edge. I normally do it by thinning an wiping on sealer a few times, but I couldn't be bothered so I just hung it up in the booth and sprayed from a rattle can. That's going to be a more expensive way to do it though, I think I'll just organise myself in future and spray a flash coat in the daytime in stead. While the sealer was drying I got on with carving the neck. This one seams to have natures go-faster stripe. I hope that doesn't turn out to be a weak spot...
  19. Cool looking build this one, looking forward to see ing progress. That cutaway doesn't strike me as a particularly high strength area. I reckon you can get away with thinning your material down there quite a bit which will make bending such a hard curve a lot easier. Re glueing back braces on - A lot of acoustics have domed backs, so you would glue the back together, get it down to desired thickness then glue the back braces on while the back is in the radius dish so it conforms to the dome shape.
  20. Well it was a fairly white piece of maple to begin with, I think I got lucky with the carbon powder I used to dye the wood, when I pulled the colour out it didn't take on a red or blue hue like sanding back black pigment can do, I think that using the acetone to pull out the colour had a slight bleaching effect too. Also the silver powder in the paint added opacity to the finish reducing the amount of visible figure from the wood underneath. If I remember rightly, I did 3 light passes with the silver in the finish, I expect if I did more, it would look a lot more silver and if I did less, it would be looking more yellow now. Another take away from this build, is I won't use ali sheet for inlay again, that stuff is like inlaying mash potato.
  21. Not a super wide neck, 43mm at the nut. The dots are 4mm
  22. I spent a good hour hunting around the workshop yesterday looking for the offcut from the top. I stashed it away somewhere safe knowing I wanted to make some back covers out of it but turned out I stashed it somewhere too safe... turned out to be behind a sheet of ply behind my wood rack. Then shaped some covers. Jump forward a few steps because I don't seem to be very good at taking progress pics at the moment. It's now wired up and all good except the p90 seems to have really low output, and measured only 4.3k. I spoke to the chap that wound it and he said he's going to send me another one, so I guess it must be a short. Apart from that, I think this is my favourite build to date.
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