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GuitarGuy

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Posts posted by GuitarGuy

  1. Ugh, sorry for the second consecutive post but I miss the edit button as well.  Anyways I exadurrated in the last post, the size of the dent only has a diameter of about 1/8", it's quite smaller than I was thinking.  If you guys think I should drop in the white primer, let me know.  Also, I wanted to spray the guitar the solid color around 8pm tonight, which would give it 8 hours to dry.  Think that would be enough time?

    Tough call. In that timeframe I'd fill it with body filler. But I have a bias to that as you can prob tell. Whatever you use dont rush anything. Depending on the type of primer it can take a while to dry though. A 2 part filler will be dry and sandable in 30 min.

  2. Keep filling the dent with primer until its just "proud" of the surface, then sand flush and resume your finish job.  You can use an eye dropper or just take a pencil (or similar), dip in the primer, and let a drop fall into the dent.

    Although that will work, it is going to take a looong time for the primer to dry. If you start sanding too soon it will just fill the sandpaper and leave a messy looking finish. The body filler would be my weapon of choice.

    Just my $0.02

  3. idch-

    Take er easy! Do it again on some scrap. A couple times if you have to. You will get it eventually. People here always seem to use brad pints or forsteners but the one flaw with those is that if you have it wrong when you start drilling you cant really move the drill bit. The leading edges that cut the hole start cutting and you're committed.

    A little machining tirck: You can move a normal drill bit as long as you havent reached the full diameter of the drill bit yet.

    Use a normal SHARP drill bit. Run your 1/8 inch pilots half way through from both sides. For the ferrules draw the edges out so each ferrule is boxed in to the correct size. This gives you the perfect size for the bit. Then just lightly start the normal bit, see if it centered it the little box you made. (you dont want to dive right in you just want a little dimple at this point) If its off correct it. Drill a bit more and correct it if its off. By the time your cut from the bit has reached the lines you've marked out it will be perfectly centered.

  4. please dont go to radio shack and get leds go to www.lsdiodes.com their cheaper and better quailty and are about 3 time brighter, non difused, and have a maximum voltage of 4.5 volts before they blow! r/s leds can only handle 2.1v!

    Wicked link. Thanks!

  5. Personally, I would pull the frets and bolt it to a flat piece of lumber and run it through a thickness planer. The hard part is going to be coming up to the truss rod.(might want to cut it out with a router first) I would fix both ends to the wood strip and make a jack for the center of the neck. Dial the length of the fretboard so it dials zero then plane. This way it will be flat and square relative to the neck.

  6. Build Your Own Electric Guitar: Custom Guitar Assembly Made Easy

    By Bill Foley

    ISBN: 0961836105

    Dont bother with that one. Any info in that is covered in Hiscock's and there are some terrible editing mistakes in it. (example: the tele wiring schematic is totally wrong)

    Another good read you missed was

    Guitar Electonics for Musicians by Donald Brosnac. It has a ton of schematics for whatever guitar you can think of. Also pickup winding info and efects as well.

  7. I know with every question im probably sounding noob...but I am new to this so dont kill me  :D . What's the best way when redrilling to get a straight drill and screw when putting that in. Drill press is out of the question with a whole guitar.

    Honestly I use a cordless drill. Make dimple in the center otf the plugged dowel using a center punch. Then start drilling at as close to straight as you can eyeball in about 1/8 inch. Then sight it fom the side and top to see if it's straight. Make corrections and keep drilling. Keep stopping and double checking untill you get to the depth.

    The drill bit size should be just big enough so that when you hold the drill bit in font of the screw you can see the threads but none of the shank.

  8. The reason I said 75% is that at full scale length the high e is almost perfectly intonated. And The only string that comes farther forward then the "high e" is the G. And its not much farther. A search may yield some more concrete answers for you.

  9. 75% forward, really?

    For any string, including the high E, the saddle NEVER needs to be adjusted forward.  It's compensating for pressing down on a string and pulling it sharp; so you only intonate backward from the 'scale length' (ie. 24.75" on an LP).

    In theory, your high E could be all the way forward; however, someone mentioned once giving a bit of wiggle room for innacurate drilling, so a millimetre or two of wiggle isn't a horrible idea; however, I'd think 75% is excessive (ie. an excessive amount of wiggle room), no?  By giving your high E less wiggle room forward, you're giving your low E MORE wiggle room backward, in combination with a carefully chosen skew.

    On the other hand, nothing at all wrong with doing it exactly the way StewMac and other diagrams recommend.  Tried and true, after all!  Not sure how much wiggle room the StewMac gives you.

    Greg

    You can probably tell by my post I'm not a big TOM guy. I just don't like em. 75% is my rule for "e" on fender style trems and hardtails. For just like you said, "wiggle" room. But with a TOM were talking millimeters difference if we say 75% or 85%. I just think its splitting hairs a bit.

  10. I think we're skirting around the question.

    For any bridge with adjustable saddles the high e should be adjusted 75% toward the neck and that should give enough play to properly intonate the rest. Then the scale length will be the distance from the neut to the High e saddle.

    As far as a TOM goes it is skewed on an angle back toward the Low E.

    Anyone have this angle? (Cant be bothered to look it up)

  11. I'm just kinda thinking out loud. Have unlimited access to a decent sized milling machine...

    Then you're set. I made mine with MDF on a drill press with a cross slide. Basically a makeshift mill and drill. You can get straight lines without sanding or filing.

    Just FYI for anyone trying the drill press idea try not to cut sideways untill its just a little bit left. Drill presses dont generally have the bearings to take a side load. Its really hard on your press.

  12. Yes, Maiden is correct, I use a 3/4" roundnose bit, and 3/4" stylus ball, but sometimes I have better results with a slightly oversized stylus, which you can get both from Terrco.  Although the first one I used was a 3/4" round wooden ball that you can get from a Crafts place, just get one with a hole predrilled in the middle, and then tighten the correct sized screw into it, then hacksaw the head off of the screw, chuck it in the stylus and your ready to go.  Just a cheap method.

    I dont want to take credit for this idea because it's someone elses. But, Have you tried chucking your router bit in a drill press and drilling it into some nylon or UHMW thats clamped in place. Lube the void left by the router bit with liquid wrench or some other dry lube. Then remove the bit and chuck a rod that is to be used for the stylus. Then , with the stylus rod locked at the right height, fill the cavity with epoxy around the tip of the stylus rod. When it dries you will have a perfect copy of the cut that the router bit makes.

    I tried it with the straight bit and it seems to work good. Havent really used it extensively tho

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