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Prostheta

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Everything posted by Prostheta

  1. @Andyjr1515 is absolutely the man for this sort of approach.
  2. The reviews look pretty lethal. Not seen it myself.
  3. Single direction can help some people, but it really depends on how you internalise the technique. Single direction may help with waste removal. I brush and vacuum my sandpaper as I work before it builds. Try, test and evaluate.
  4. I haven't yet, no. The bass is functionally complete and plays really nicely. I haven't posted finished pics yet as I need to locate some set screws of the correct length for the custom control knobs, plus the brass rear cavity covers need brushing and sealing with shellac or lacquer. The electronics are complete other than the rotary varitone, which is proving a conundrum as usual. The objective with that is to neatly stack the components around the switch body so that it is both aesthetically pleasing, neat and well-made. The originals in the Aria Pro II basses were good, if a little precarious. The modern reissue SB-1000 basses have varitones that are less than ideal in many respects, so I really wanted to priorities making everything as good as it could ever have been. I will follow up, as I want to GOTM this bass.
  5. Man, I had this same problem with my glow-in-the-dark epoxy inlays. The broken grains are obviously porous and started hanging onto Ebony dust.
  6. Perhaps a better explanation here is that all parts of the surface should receive equal "time" on the sandpaper with equal pressure. Pushing a workpiece down in the centre or only at the very ends changes the rate at which material is removed at different places. To a degree this becomes a mental ability along with muscle memory. I have a large flat plywood board onto which I glued a wide sheet from a thickness sander. It's similar to sanding a fretboard with a radiusing beam. If you run the beam right off the ends, you end up with a curve rolling off the ends. If you dwell entirely on the board, the centre is always getting abraded. With my (500mm?) beams I apply light-medium pressure in the middle of the beam (so I'm not deforming the workpiece or the beam) and only move my hand between the middle third, or maybe middle two quarters. The main thing is that you have a flat reference surface to check progress continuously and adjust accordingly.
  7. There's a fourth way, however I don't know if magazines and battered VHS tapes are still an allowable thing in a professional medical institution. It's probably a ten year old copy of Top Gear and the latest Koti ja Keittio.
  8. It smells beautiful, as though it is made from pure Oreo smoke. Ebony smells like sneezes and black boogers. I haven't seen that one! I presume that you're aware of the local Turku parody band The Black Satans? I think they were more of a joke between friends than a band. This one was filmed at Turku Castle of course edit: Oh man, I forgot that they formed Suamenlejjona and have toured a bit. "Urheilu ja Isänmaa" ("Sport and Fatherland") is probably their most known track. Beer, sausage and ice hockey.
  9. Thanks to the recommendations off that video (I remember this advert!) there's an entire rabbithole of metal band parody videos and adverts to go down. Even though the Persil advert has its own cringe value associated with it, I am thankful that most metalheads such as myself can laugh at the hypocrisies and sillier aspects of our favoured musical preferences. This Fedex advert seems to have been made by a team that clearly understands the existence of Slipknot and Alice Cooper as part of their sendup.
  10. I haven't worked with it myself, even though I tried opening a conversation with the makers when they first introduced the product to the market. I can imagine exactly how it works though, especially based upon your description. Have you worked with African Blackwood before? This has very similar properties in that it is like machining a homogenous composite or resin-based product. Cutters gum up, heat is generated very easily and cutters blunt quickly as a combination of that heat and the toughness of the material. I imagine that it would be very good under a laser though, however the smoke might be somewhat oily and contaminate optics very quickly if not exhausted with prejudice. Looking at your cut edges and the quality of them feels very familiar. You have my condolences, and beer tokens are in the mail.
  11. The Internet keeps saying that we shouldn't do that, or that somehow this is the bearer of poor consequences! In my experience it is simply....experience. You can't learn anything from things falling into your lap, you've got to test, experiment, compare and derive better understanding from things not going entirely how you expected them to. "FAFO" is a bit of a dumb term, or at least I see it used by people enough that it underscores how dumb and nuance-free their thought "processes" are. In this instance, I agree. Fuck around and find out. On your own terms with the objective of raising your ability and knowledge. This is fine.
  12. Whilst I'm unsure whether it'll improve matters significantly, it would be interesting to see how a more chemically pure application worked out simply for comparison. The stuff we make is proper bunk chemistry, but probably more fun because of that
  13. The best information I have is to use a pure iron source such as old nails or whatever. Steel wool isn't the best, but it's the easiest. Spirit vinegar is 5% acetic acid or thereabouts. I don't think it's an accurate process without going to the point where concentrations and processes become less safe. @komodo had fantastic results using Quebracho tea as a source of tannic acid though.
  14. Technically what you want is Iron (III) Oxide. Clean your wire wool with acetone to remove grease and contaminants. Steel wool isn't ideal, but it's quick. Heat the vinegar first and keep it warm. Strain through a coffee filter or two. It's probably what you're already doing anyway! Edit: Brain dumb. Iron iii acetate.
  15. Epoxy doesn't need to be a thick layer. Just a consistent film on both surfaces. Clamping does not need to be too tight, just enough to close up any glue line. I used to hate it as well, however once I started planning ahead and staying in control of the job (doing a dry run, putting everything in place to hand, etc) it became much nicer to work with.
  16. Yes, if you have a CNC and can cut HDPE cleanly then that works out really nicely. Just remember to drill holes through the base of each inlay, tape them up during casting and push the inlay out from the back. I forgot to do this....
  17. Very very cool! I guess that the inlays were cast-in-place rather than the inlays being cast in HDPE and inserted into the board?
  18. I heard about that, and it absolutely does not surprise me. Polyurethane glues are absolutely not appropriate, and anybody that has a reasonable level of technical knowledge about adhesives would know this. Ben has always come across as somebody who plays a confidence game rather than somebody who has defensible ideas to bring to the table. I have a particular dislike for people who sell poor-to-dangerous ideas as some sort of acceptable method, let alone a standard for others to follow. That's the worst sort of "teaching", because he absolutely needs to take responsibility for the appropriateness of anything put out into the public sphere under the flag of "professional" luthier. Some kid copies his method and loses a finger? That's on him. I could never recommend anything that propagates ignorance over safe and defensible knowledge. Rant over. Definitely not polyurethane!
  19. The only problem here is that aluminium oxide/silicon carbide grit will damage any cutting tools it encounters. Not hugely, but it won't improve them at all Salt is resilient enough to stay granular in a normal glue film, but break when cut. As for Richlite, I would use epoxy. Anything that is a composite of resins will have questionable wetting compared to wood, so reliance is going to be on a mechanical bond. That means breaking surfaces with 80-120 grit, cleaning with acetone, wetting both with epoxy and having non-excessive and equal clamping pressure. I've not worked with Richlite, so I would be cautious and go with what is guaranteed to work.
  20. Well, you always need clamps. Bolts, screws or anything that can draw two surfaces together are useful. No idea about the salt. I doubt that a pinch makes that much difference, and if it did I am sure somebody more capable that I would comment on it. Mainly it's to help prevent surfaces skating about under hydrostatic pressure.
  21. You can even put bolts with washers through to provide clamping pressure since tuner holes are mostly 10mm diameter. Of course, a plywood caul is needed either side. One or two clamps and it covers the lot. An old trick I learnt was to sprinkle a little table salt into the glue to provide friction between the two surfaces as the glue sets up. The grains bite into the mating surfaces like sandpaper.
  22. Adding a drill hole next to a pad allows you to strain relieve wire connectors. It does add to the finished depth of the board of course.
  23. That's all part of the fun, at least for me anyway. I enjoy the process and the mental exercise more than having to reach the end goal. Of course, that's always good, however I do think that upping one's abilities, trying new challenges and building on previous experiences and new information keeps life interesting. It's the journey, not about the podium.
  24. The concept of Millimetric's is interesting, however I can't help but see a lot of potential short grain through the area where the neck meets the heel. It seems even less supported than how old 70s SGs were glued in close to the neck pickup. This is one of those situations where principles absolutely must come first, and viewing their gallery it seems they have a deeper heel to fix this weak point, which sort of defeats the objective of creating greater upper fret access. Hmph. Yours has a much superior strength in that specific point, so I would say that you shouldn't get "too inspired"! Travis Beans are an excellent example, however they don't have the fend with the issues that wood presents. Hey, have you ever wondered if a guitarist has ever wanted to change the profile of a Travis Bean? "A bit off the profile please!". What a nightmare
  25. My thought processes altered maybe 4-5yrs back when I really delved into manufacturing process design. I couldn't start without a design these days! The Travis Bean idea is certainly one that I've seen before, and being aluminium the design of the neck attachment really suits the material. If you can pull it off in wood, that's a real trick. I think I now have that idea in the back of my head, where I have to design something so that I could make 10x, 100x or 1000x of something as well as I could make 1x. The real satisfaction for me is in designing the method, winding up the clockwork and letting her go So autistic.
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