Jump to content

argytar

GOTM Winner
  • Posts

    172
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    7

Posts posted by argytar

  1. 17 minutes ago, mistermikev said:

    very light - that sounds ideal for a firebird.  cool beans.  look fwd to seeing her come together.  that special anbove is v nice.

    The special is a Korina one-piece build with a Madagascar rosewood board. The sustain is insane and it also pops like a strat on steroids! That came out pretty light too like 3.25 kilos! I expect the firebird to be 2.7 Kilos WITH the B5 Bigsby!

  2. 52 minutes ago, Andyjr1515 said:

    This is a really impressive build.  As @komodo says, you don't see many one piece guitars.  In fact, this is the first one I've seen being built before our very eyes 🙂

    Splendid.

    Thank you very much!! This is actually my third one-piece build!! My first one was Eaperanza and was featured as a contestant in guitar of the month like 15 years ago here at the forum!!

     

    The second one is a Les Paul special from Korina that was “stolen” from me by the best blues player in Greece E. Zaikos of the Blues Wire band! Look them up!

    It started as a necessity and I just wanted to revisit that kind of build!

    I am enjoying the process very much I must say!!

    23446B0D-55B6-4194-ADC9-AD0351F76B5B.png

    8A1B92EF-A239-42F5-B7F3-42008263D831.png

    • Like 1
  3. 1 hour ago, mistermikev said:

    very nice looking guitar.  1 piece is pretty cool and has it's own set of challenges - you are overcoming them well.  cudos.

    Thank you so much!! It s coming out pretty light too, makes me want to try something similar with Korina next time.

    What I especially like is the fact that if you tap it, it vibrates as a whole so I am guessing the sustain will be cool. We will see!!

    • Like 1
  4. So I got some more progress down today.

    I shaped the back of the neck with the shaver a little bit.

    A6977FEC-3D3F-43A4-83D8-25F182470A72.thumb.jpeg.7422bea0dcbd76cdf0a628dd65d9be4a.jpeg

    0447E7B9-7629-40CE-A683-7C5448D9A102.thumb.jpeg.4cadcc286a46d33fa07a4e2a014e3f86.jpeg
    I tapered the side winds to go from 34 to 30 mm like in the old firebirds. I use the hand planer and the orbital sander.

    B4147654-3E56-4FDA-B764-14E53D8A0443.thumb.jpeg.75a266dd8a9500e205a67f95982d06db.jpeg

    I used the dremel to put a chamfer on the sides...

    1F1D3979-1FDD-41B0-9111-859CD44AE054.thumb.jpeg.b32f1c012798c45e29c959ce9482176d.jpeg

    7B3D3F04-25F6-4D62-AB5E-C0D71117F089.thumb.jpeg.0c189e30990b822b4c88bb648e19325d.jpeg


    Then I drilled for the pots and the input jack.

    F0274126-821D-4CE3-9AB1-10785B47DF14.thumb.jpeg.a8c8d4bca9369bb92b62cc1bc01c894e.jpeg

    Did a little cavity work.

    60D24BE9-5560-40D6-92F3-2255D723B8F9.thumb.jpeg.7139f902d763f0993963af1060674d0f.jpeg

    E7133570-2851-41BE-B968-AAE16437965D.thumb.jpeg.3f879a5c19a5365abe853252dded24c8.jpeg

    264EE1B0-394E-49F6-AE73-C50C5967299E.thumb.jpeg.647a48918d8f6f33bcb283a0e164da9e.jpeg

    1614791F-53D1-4EAB-B0E8-7D6570B34B9A.thumb.jpeg.1139194ffd7d5970a46782965284aa27.jpeg

     

    I like it even better now! Let us see how it turns out! It will be light!! Like 2.6 kilos!!! It has a nice bassy ring to her when you tap her , I believe the sustain will be extraordinary!

     

    0B5C013C-32EF-4E9E-BD93-859C4BB2FB51.thumb.jpeg.b4ba8b6a11d721afff037b939f25b8a0.jpeg

    DB8BF56D-B5DC-43A1-B282-E54FADF2A83C.thumb.jpeg.5bf1b76c0434a79ca51efccb33b66fc8.jpeg

     

    I wanted to paint her green metallic but now I am having second thoughts... any suggestions??

    CF379E55-5DB9-4E82-B1E8-04C00D2D0595.jpeg

  5. 12 minutes ago, Bizman62 said:

    The ring of the bridge pickup looks to be surprisingly similar in size to the P90 and knowing that the strings spread wider in that area as well I suppose it will follow the long wedge from the nut to the bridge closely enough.

    Hope it will!

     No that is actually a TV jones humbucker adapter ring. I put it there to see how black looks like, compared to the black neck soapbar. I might have to make one and see what is up. I want to try an aluminum one too and see what fits better!

  6. 24 minutes ago, Bizman62 said:

    Don't get me wrong, for a hobbyist even market tools can well be good enough. I've had my Black and Decker hammer drill for over 30 years and the Johnswell cordless drill with original battery for about 25 years and they both still do their job. And I still kick my arse for not buying the Lidl/Parkside hand router for half the price, the reason being that I already had a similar one by another brand. For €30 the 12 bit pack alone would have been worth it!

    Yeap, especially in the early days I didn’t want to invest too much , nowadays I tend to buy better stuff but if the cheap old ones still hold up and do their job I keep them!

    Parkside has some descent examples as I can see!! The planer more than does its job (I only use it for that one thing) and the cordless screwdriver too!

  7. 33 minutes ago, Bizman62 said:

    Wow! It goes to show that even Lidl tools are good enough for a hobbyist.

    I'd vote for a black ring to match the black P90. Seeing that the hardware isn't too shiny I'd also sand the plastic of both the ring and the P90 matte.

    Hi! Well, some of them are on the cheap side but I got some good ones too like stew mac stuff , Bosch jigsaw, makita orbital sander etc.

    Anyways thanks for the input! I will try for a slight relic! I will make a black ring for the mini hum and try it out!!

  8. 71A27931-EA61-48BA-8EC8-36785E6D0620.thumb.jpeg.8d446eedd16e51e6d3c3d9b5027b77c0.jpeg

    Side dots are ready. 
     

    99FBBEF1-7E52-43CD-BCDF-EEE732D5D840.thumb.jpeg.aaec9558fc3a8967fdc7a8d2dff15a4b.jpeg

    Started the fretboard radius. It will be 12”.

    8BCBD232-43B2-47B6-96A1-C4AAF777057F.thumb.jpeg.4c1ff4a3afeb64234018b0d50cc429ba.jpeg

    Finished it with the aluminum beam.

    50241AE9-97D2-43D8-BAC9-5BCD34C2DAF1.thumb.jpeg.f7af4e62b36c46bba090bc8d177da98b.jpeg

     

    Designed a maple veneer for the headstock.

     

    329DE86E-49C3-4E12-90A7-73F663DBA6FE.thumb.jpeg.33657c3898c7a4adf47f50ddacf942fb.jpeg

    Cut it with the dremel moto saw.

    4D09093C-21CD-4377-BC1D-605847D852E1.thumb.jpeg.c523646aa761b647b79b0d7d013baac1.jpeg

     

    AB301A5B-C961-4441-B0C6-8C0DF3561752.thumb.jpeg.ab791429d6f5b76e3aa54a69f0a76091.jpeg

    ... and glued it on the guitar.

     

    671571C2-3D42-46CF-AE59-0C080D4E2784.thumb.jpeg.2f22db9fe1ec28af51b53e2b49380776.jpeg

     

    Marked the back of the neck and I cut the excess wood with the jigsaw.

    3970A8F0-D701-4898-A8FF-CE2F30D781C5.thumb.jpeg.ef5afac81345ca50d3052151d8110427.jpeg

    Afterwards I thickness the back of the neck with the safeTplanner to 2mm.

    D47C805D-8DBE-4720-A422-113D11EB1533.thumb.jpeg.43a154f37352c9d7b01f5d8a0c4cf137.jpeg

    Some more shaping was done at the volute area with the spindle sander...

     

    89CE5285-6166-44BF-AE3F-7891CBB4E77E.thumb.jpeg.e56c0bc8d41046b288b7a3f0b5c39f54.jpeg

    Started bringing the back down to achieve 40mm thickness.

    B4EDCCB2-AEA5-410F-9540-18E0238DC663.thumb.jpeg.e42a117f95dd36fdc4e375ca27d55c21.jpeg

    F7D1D58A-95C6-4A7A-A6A8-957AC967B706.thumb.jpeg.c4d8a1b020053af8ccbf8c7fa5121a5f.jpeg

    levelled it well with the hand plane.

    FF632120-A6D8-4E70-83BF-53532458A0A3.thumb.jpeg.18d980723f5d59ec360a9348a21d0246.jpeg

    Marked for the side steps.

     

    7BBF5A44-534E-476E-9D24-2B92EBB6B400.thumb.jpeg.26378936735920467a26c9e8eb2007e2.jpeg

    And there they are with the same channelling way with the help of the router. Did the belly cut too.

    3E1D0E63-70C5-4867-AF44-67502F8BC2C8.thumb.jpeg.6e51b67d52443eee2b31595ed424add4.jpeg

    Routed out the neck pickup. I want the neck pup to be a p90 and the bridge pup to be a minihum Neil Young style. I will add a bigsby...

    CBECA77C-472E-4B20-A4FB-061A2BF83DA5.thumb.jpeg.6e882ed37df701dd9ef47905ac48bc1c.jpeg
     

    The guitar is very very light!!! 1.7 kilos withouth the board and hardware! That is the weight of a light strat body!!!

    Started installing frets. Hosco M1 narrow jumbo. The scale is 25.625” so I guess this will suit the high register nicely spacewise...

    53EBC54A-82F0-4AA0-A7B4-92450A0EFCCF.thumb.jpeg.1b1f9ea84701818bd73a8964f38f2118.jpeg

     

     

    5513B812-6DF4-47EC-9504-FD543AAE7FA9.jpeg

  9. I marked a contour to the bottom of the maple block and shaped it with the spindle sander.

    EE1DF0E6-96AD-469B-B516-C70692CFE55D.thumb.jpeg.d3fa6f9e8ab6f24c954d7a9a9897ad9e.jpeg

     

    0256EA84-3AFF-4D1A-A088-2CB4B76C5285.thumb.jpeg.d3190f1e47e6a76bcf689302d149dee1.jpeg

     

    F08E9FA4-8695-4A6B-AE84-DCC4140B9C25.thumb.jpeg.e5b1719b2f0864aa14dbb9623fc5984a.jpeg

     

    i then applied titebond glue and clamped it lightly on the rod without pressing too much and left it there to dry for a couple of days.

    E131C1DD-98CC-4C57-90D4-4DE925A51E5B.thumb.jpeg.3dfd094d1de75ea9a7f2debe1104953e.jpeg

    When I returned, I used the hand plane to get it nice and level.

    After that, it was time to cut frets on the rosewood board.

    F7B2F638-EFC5-4B93-9B19-DDBA6B502CD3.thumb.jpeg.a6201325e35ba376a4d256c9c1d4b202.jpeg

    I used the guitar neck to route a channel to the sides of the boards for the cream binding.

    E765F42F-3FA9-4CEF-BEC5-776A074A572F.thumb.jpeg.25f5da6bbae0891504b6fae40e5c192c.jpeg

    90D91A1A-EFA2-4E34-97EF-9003784F1416.thumb.jpeg.630c724729971f31ab947fb9619ad8c5.jpeg

    BDE8DCDA-E5D1-4B73-A965-C0A113E55E60.thumb.jpeg.2b7b752e682cb2ba33b68a293c420381.jpeg
     

    I installed the pearloid fretboard dots...

    DB99DBBA-90B0-4335-95F3-194C437AC9C0.thumb.jpeg.c93e667d0619f6507950b01e1c026730.jpeg

     

    C1727175-ED7A-41C3-A760-E77D788FE8F7.thumb.jpeg.8fadb7aaa925d75cdf39ebc3495926a8.jpeg

    8AA0D167-159D-41D6-AE2E-1548546AE87A.thumb.png.c7cdb5ba760a8e5e3b703c7722a42ad5.png

    And the binding is also installed...

  10. Continuing with the build, it was time to cut for the truss rod channel. I want to use a traditional rod with a maple strip cap for added rigidity.

    I laid out the borders of the channel with a ruler. Then, I pressed a sharp chisel on the lines to separate the wood a little bit.

    That helped a lot because as I used the concave chisel the central wood strip started raising up real nice and clean! (-ly)

    7B81E25E-7DED-4F9A-9CE1-53BC7BFA607B.thumb.jpeg.8b2790cd26c3feae5c4e30d87ee19200.jpeg

     

    D26AEF46-49E9-4B16-9967-4DC7A34EBD99.thumb.jpeg.37c56cd240df1155757ce6172f466c89.jpeg

     

    A narrower router bit helped me lower the channel at about 8 mm and remain inside the borders of the channel.

    I drilled the central part to the depth of 17mm and used the chisel to make a contoured channel by hand. That was surprisingly easy because this wood is so soft... hmmm

    EA381764-54A0-43C3-B9CA-B791E91DEA2D.thumb.jpeg.4488e13099b9fe592ea779897aca1d46.jpeg

     

    I cut the rod to the length I wanted it and toped it.

    Tried it out and it seems to fit nicely!

    B5F69742-D907-465E-A1B6-0942C0DDFDCF.thumb.jpeg.dbeda214401e2414469e3d45d7dfda1b.jpeg

     

    After some time I decided to lower the body a bit like on the old firebirds. I measured and routed the body down with channels as I did earlier with the body front.

     

    ED001091-033A-4DE8-9C81-C53EEF4C3D71.thumb.jpeg.efdf50d5b5697a44a371d8972b71f47e.jpeg

     

    CD3B1563-8511-4683-BEC7-AB8685873372.thumb.jpeg.68547771a802bf1686d1bbcbccbd7a6a.jpeg

    17CBBE96-2D9E-427E-98F8-FA92022D9831.thumb.jpeg.7bd41e67dabc4c090fc7f51ba247b3e9.jpeg

     

    6B684C7B-FA83-478C-AB88-C08FA7D33D8E.thumb.jpeg.f993f0c3b70773db0aa1507d364b5437.jpeg

    • Like 1
  11. ... right away.

    So afterwards it was time for me to give an angle to the neck.

    Firstly I used a fretboard template to rout the outline of the neck.

    1F8B6BE2-A5E4-48C2-8689-A3853401D688.thumb.jpeg.98cbe2dd578a2aa96d1b4030d75d1ee9.jpeg

     

    Right after that, I used the power planner to give an angle to the headstock.

    F81E2A63-1443-4198-91F5-11A1F95FBD5F.thumb.jpeg.5a00b791f0714adffab20dce715be385.jpeg

    Then, I put two steel rails and an elongated base to my router and I used it as a jig to bring the neck back.

    369E99CB-D277-431B-A074-D1B62E22BFB1.thumb.jpeg.fb22611b7f2b67ba7b7b46b65dc62405.jpeg

    After some planing and sanding on a flat belt sander it was straight as an arrow!

    D7745530-2870-40A6-B926-513D69107C7B.thumb.png.5156163a0b46ce129687688316b0e662.png
     

    DB7BEB52-2404-4E02-9CFF-A8C98F22CAE6.thumb.jpeg.3036e0ba873497edab5ad6f0c9440254.jpeg

     

    E3B5DB09-6C3A-4FF5-A1F6-A863994DBCE2.thumb.jpeg.5ad1e0d5667a848ebe8119cfbd0ecbfa.jpeg

  12. Hi y’all!

    This argytar from Greece. I am an ENT surgeon  and it has been more than 15 years that I have been building guitars on and off.

    These days are very difficult since tha virus started spreading here in Greece and my practice and the decrease of moving back and forth ha brought me closer to my shop. Of course my phone is ringing almost every 15 minutes , but that is another thing.

    Anyways, I have recently tried a friend ‘s epi firebird VII and loved the feel. I had some hardware lying around and after some offset builds (like the Pimp-master) I decided to give a birdie a go with a twist.

    I will make it out of a single block of ayouz wood or obeche which is very very light!.

    I have found a somewhat old steardy dry piece and started working in my little nonetheless spare time.

     

    68662D4C-1990-4ABA-8084-B1D58905AE16.thumb.jpeg.3b795a7e6925bef6574772d9e85d82c7.jpeg

    So firstly, I layed out the outline using a 1:1 printed firebird studio .pdf that a friend of mine printed out with his plotter.

    A44B9D5D-5C99-48AB-BCD5-B2864F989489.thumb.png.b3628d602037d17093b21cd586578c45.png

    Then, I used a jigsaw to cut out the outline.

    96029C66-AD50-4507-B031-26DA54308B0D.thumb.jpeg.68a104e8dd1b75e7f832e140e246d6a4.jpeg

     

    After measuring and drawing on the wood the center line it was time to lower the body 2 mm. That is how much the Obeche part of the neck would have been protruding from the body should it was glued on. I want it at an angle so that is the first step I took.

    I used an old method, I got me router to make large grooves of 2 mm. The body was 52 mm thick. That means I had plenty of wood to work on.

    E4633540-42A4-4204-86C4-50D8F5D73E2C.thumb.png.19a7bd5df3f2be2bf9258a42a25236fa.png

     

    59D79273-F757-4B92-B1C3-7B75C1625A18.thumb.png.3a9e3d87ef8618f284cc49a53fcd8563.pngC33E6DC4-E8D4-45BD-8AC3-D2792BBE1ED7.thumb.png.d555f1803ed27c852f7dd614a3291db7.png0DD3F126-5B4D-4773-BD5E-CD39587FA1A5.thumb.png.41de18f28c175eb005ffd9081dea1e17.png

     

    Using a small hand plane I flattened the surface.

     

    To be continued...

     

    • Like 1
  13. Hi! Haven't posted in a while. Some time ago I made a Gretsch-o-tele project and named it after my daughter.

    So... This is Danae!

    It's close to an orange chicken , but it has a flat top and a bolt-on neck. The body was routed also for conventional string-through - body if you put a norman tele neck on. The custom bridge is floating as per vintage Gretsch. (I have an original 1966 6120 dc Nashville and got much info outta that.)

    Mahogany body with 5A maple top.

    QS chunky maple neck , bound.

    Ebony fretboard with real MOP "neo-classical" inlays

    TV Jones classics

    Schaller tuners

    Bound matching headstock inlaid "Danae" with real MOP

    CTS pots Switchcraft three-way toggle switch. Switchcraft jack. Orange drop .022 cap.

    Bolt-on neck at an angle

    Sawn - off Bigsby B5

    Custom ebony rocking bar bridge.

    Finished exclusivelly with schellac!!

    Take a listen!

    imageproxy.php?img=&key=b0e8b6d47833182aimageproxy.php?img=&key=b0e8b6d47833182aimageproxy.php?img=&key=b0e8b6d47833182a

     

    image.png

    image.png

    image.png

    image.png

    image.pngimage.thumb.png.8597dbee7c9f3151ee3ea8a128760776.png

    image.png

    • Like 3
×
×
  • Create New...