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fyb

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Posts posted by fyb

  1. I guess I was not as clear as I intended in my first post. I know that hard maple the the preferable wood for 1 and 2 piece necks (by this, I was thinking of fender style necks). I don't want to take any chances with soft maple for a traditional strat neck.

    What I'm thinking of doing is a 5 ply neck of soft maple/ash/soft maple/ash/soft maple. I want to keep the maple parts natural and somehow (this may be the hard part :D) dye the ash the same green as the ash in the guitar body.

    Hope this helps! :D

    Do you think this is feasible??

  2. I'm making a strat-style guitar out of hard ash, and I plan to stain/dye it a translucent colors (probably green). I got a nice piece of flamed soft maple today dirt cheap (1" x 6" x 5' for $3!!!!!!!!!) and I was thinking of using it for a laminated neck for the guitar. I was thinking of using 1 or 2 ash pieces in the laminated neck, and I want to color them to match the body.

    I know hard maple is preferable for i or 2 piece necks, but soft maple should work with some laminations, right? Do you think this will work? Hard ash is the same stuff as in baseball bats . . . so it should be pretty strong right?

    Help! :D

  3. Hello! I was perusing ebay and they seem to have quite a bit of good looking woods for considerably cheaper than I expected to pay (cheaper/smaller quantities than the local hardwood distributor and definitely cheaper than some place like stewmac.com). I was also looking at some boards for non-guitar type projects (e.g. I want to build some bedroom furniture and I found some beautiful figured cherry on ebay).

    Do you think it's a good idea to buy wood this way? Have you had any experience with this?

    What sort of things should I really look out for?

    Thanks!

  4. If it's anything like the ash I bought (european ash), then yeah, this stuff is difficult to cut. But I used my jig saw for the rough cut, then cleaned it up with a router/template/bearing bit.

    Also, it's a really heavy wood --so you might think twice about building a guitar with it, unless you're planning on hollowing it out. Even still, it's really heavy stuff, it might not be what you're looking for.

    Well, I wanted to try it because it was cheap . . . I got a 12' x 8' x 2" board for about the price of a standard alder body blank. If it doesn't work out for a guitar, or I make one and it sounds like crap, I'll just use the rest for a bookshelf or something. I don't mind the weight so much . . . I'm a big guy (6'5" and 250 lbs) so 10-11 lbs is no big deal if it sounds OK. We'll see I guess :D

  5. Hello all! I'm new here because I finally decided to make the leap into guitar building. :D I'm going to try to male a traditional 'strat' style guitar so I can use my present guitar as a template and I can easily buy a neck in case my first neck comes out horribly.

    For the body, I got some hard ash from a local supplier (it was pretty cheap <$3/bd ft for 8/4 stuff) so I thought I'd give that a try. I don't have a bandsaw though, so I figured I'd try to cut the rough outline with a jig saw . . . which didn't work at all. :D Granted, the jig saw is an older (>10 years) model and only ~2.5 amps. That wood is way harder to cut then I anticipated!! I searched for threads about hard ash and I didn't seem to run across any that involved cutting it.

    How else do you think I can cut the outline?? Would a more powerful saw be able to cut the ash?? Can you use a jig saw on other traditional guitar woods like mahogany or alder??

    Thanks for your help!

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