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Muzz

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Everything posted by Muzz

  1. Yep red with a white pup, and pickguard? would look cool.
  2. Cool, it's coming along OK Marked out the route Transferred the template to a bigger sheet, at this point it's 15 mm deep, time to switch to a longer bit for the last 3 mm I used a spade bit to cut out the jack hole, I don't think I would use a spade again, it was a bit juddery and not real clean around the top, I'll try a forstner bit next time. Channel route finished.
  3. only if they're the bits of wood you intended to shear off... Hey Supp, yep it's the risk of the FUBAR that somehow makes it even more fun. Yea.... All alone. In an isolated room. Playing with your wood. Naked. you need to get a new 'happy place' to go to I'll start you off, the two 22 year old Scandinavian girls that moved in next door, come round to your place to use your sun lamp, its been raining and ............ Guide hole for the output jack Widening out the guide with a 22 mm spade, making sure the distance from the hole to the edge is 11 mm.
  4. Doing the back counter was a great part of the shaping process, there is just something so relaxing for a bloke about being in the shed, shearing off bits of wood. I started off with the sureform When I started getting close to the lines, I switched to the rasp, see the lesson learnt at kindy, stay in between the lines was useful. Then when it was almost flat, I started bringing it in really flat with a spoke shave, you can see the parts of the wood that have been shaved at this point. The spoke shave reminds me of a crab for some reason. After this, all it needed then was the ends neatened in with a mini file and a tiny bit of sanding. If you have only done tummy tucks with an angle grinder or a band saw before, give yourself a zen treat sometime and try it the quiet way for a change
  5. All three are great, but I especially love the blue one, it looks so sleek and cool.
  6. Hey mang, absolutely I have taken an experimental approach at various stages and tried to do things using some different techniques than you might usually see on this forum, but I never want to get stuck in my own rut or get imprinted with the first technique that works for me, so I am putting a belt sander on my Christmas list added your grit progression to my methods list The steps have gone, just a bit of tidying up to do, Running a craft blade along the crease Close to finished Marking out the tummy tuck This is going to be done the old fashioned way with hand tools.
  7. That body is almost an exact copy of an Ibanez GIO 22 fret model, apart from the rear route, the only difference I can see with the model they sell in is the top horn join stops just short of the neck join end, on the real Ibanez it is equal. I reckon you will be able to make a really good guitar out of it if you bling it up. You might want to consider, repairing the black finish, it looks like it is in good nick apart from the chips. It is probably a 5 piece basswood under the finish, don't know if it is worth stripping. Good luck with it.
  8. Great, I'll have a look right after this. Yep, it worked well, can't wait to play Round and Round on it. A little bit of a burst would look good, yep whatever happens pickguard on will be the main state for this guitar. Yep, to me the PG is now an important part of the build, I don't have the wood obsession to the point where I can't cover up a few square cm. I didn't say it would structurally hurt the build. I was just trying to point out that you should just build what you want. No wucking furries. Tonight, I drew out the profile I wanted for the arm rest, split it into 20 x 3mm divisions and measured the depth of cut for each one. The router bit travels 55 mm in front of the router edge, so I marked out the lines of cut 55 mm back from where they would occur. I used an Ikea shelf as a router edge guide, hey there is a use for Ikea stuff and look Mike, I have the same toolbox as you Just got to smoth over the steps now
  9. Go Stewey, this is gonna be a monster
  10. Great project, that would keep me busy for 20 years, I am no metal worker but if you are I reckon you should be fine making the Floyd if you buy the saddle assemblies, that would be the trickiest part.
  11. Time to put the hardware on the neck today. I drew out where the strings were heading and measured between them to get the anchor points for the string retainer. I drilled guide holes on the drill press to make sure they were straight, took, Avengers' advice and reamed them out with the next size up drill bit, then Our Souls' advice and marked off the drill bit with tape so I didn't drill straight through to the other side like I did on the practice neck. Then put on the machine heads, I never realised that the washers have an up and down side you learn something new I'll take the stickers off when it's finished and strung up, it's a little ceremony, like taking the clear plastic off the pickguard.
  12. Double sided tape ay now that is a good suggestion. I love scratchplates, they give an almost art deco look to a guitar and I love the challenge they are to make. I don't see the suggestion of a rear route as interference, it's a viable alternative, how would it structurally ruin this build? Will rear route be bad for this project? I ignore or reject bad advice but I am always ready to consider reasonable and feasible advice. I tried a rear route out on the MDF model this arvy, happy to hear what you and others think Marked out the holes, drilled right through with a 2 mm bit. 12 mm hole for the switch Routed the cavity down 31 mm, put in a 18 mm wide seating for the switch. , Which leaves 2mm depth easily for the plate. That is proof of concept, I'll ponder on which side to route.
  13. Pearloid rocks dude, get a pearloid pick guard for this thing. So I am thinking from your two bits of advice above that you mean screw that rockin pearloid pick guard to your guitar, OK then There is only one other meaning of "screw the scratch panel man" but I can't do that (not that there is anything wrong with that) because it is against my religion. Now obviously from the caps shouting you are keen on a rear route, which is in keeping with the Mr. Potato Head guitar philosophy, and all it would need would be a couple of long shaft pots I am going to think about the feasability of this idea, but it is novel and that appeals to me. It would look good with that stain wouldn't it, here is a pic of an ash body stained blue. Now if I subscribe to the Mr. Potato Head ethos of guitar decoration, it could be played with the pick guard on when the mood takes me or it could be played naked, that means the guitar without a pickguard, if it was me naked I would need to keep my socks on, I need somewhere to keep my picks.
  14. That seems like the hard way of doing it. Wouldn't it have been easier to bump up the drill bit by 1/64" (or whatever the indexed bits are in Oz) and ream it out that way? Hard That's not hard, you try watching other folks make ten guitars in the time it takes you to cut out a blank, that's hard (Yes, I am a massive Glee fan, its the Western World's Bollywood) good thing I am not making one of these Actually the machine head reamer is my newest invention, I am calling it dowel with sandpaper wrapped around the end. Of course I am the first to invent it. Yes in we have both kinds of music, heavy and metal, and we have both kinds of measurement, metric and hopelessly outdated, illogical system. Metric system goes up in 500 micrometre steps. Starting to cut out the template, how did I ever survive without these mini files? Is it the same Trojan that makes raincoats? I grabbed them in an impulse buy off the counter at Bunnings and now I am totally dependent on them. Used them to shape out the template Positioning where the route will go Got to get back to watching Survivor Allstars, talk soon.
  15. Hey, glad you're enjoying this thread, I am working on the cavity route template at the moment, funny looking shape
  16. Now that's what I like to see, smooth sides and sharp edges That timber looks so good I wouldn't be putting a cap on it, but I won't get upset if you don't take my advice, because only do that Lookin forward to seeing more of your build.
  17. Lovely piece of timber, great grain pattern join, what will you use to clean up the shape? rasp and spokeshave or router and template? All the best with it.
  18. The holes in the headstock are a smidge too tight for the machine heads. I taped a ribbon of sandpaper to a dowel and wrapped it. and sanded out the holes until the fit is snug.
  19. Mucking around with stain and finish to get an idea if this is a good colour for this guitar Practicing the arm rest on MDF and the tummy tuck
  20. All right That shape is unreal, fantastic, I am going to enjoy watching this project, yep the Ibanez GIO necks are terrific.
  21. That crackle played hard to get, just to make you appreciate it more it looks terrific.
  22. I know where you are coming from Prostheta. I am already looking to acquire something to replace it with. I think I'll give plain aluminium a go next, all polished up to a mirror finish. Do you reckon I should make the entire pickup surround out of al, or keep the black on chrome look, or just black? Fantastic bass, high impact, sleek, yep the bridge pup would look at home in an all black collar
  23. Not at all, I dig seeing your builds on the interweb, I think you and I both put playability, solidity and tone as a first priority, and you take some ballsy experimental risks that often turn out great, or lead to reflection on how to do it better next time, either way your skills are evolving. I can be thrown into that category sometimes. I tend to look at them as compositions and art pieces a lot of times. I'll pick out the theme and overall plan, then let it take me where it wants to go. Sometimes it works out OK, sometimes not. If it doesn't work out, I dismantle it and re-use the parts. Most of the time, the wood is the least expensive component, and the most fun!. Right on, it is fun to walk along the edge, I love art that polarizes. It's tight, but it fits.
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