Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Need advice on guitar build
Collapse
X
-
That looks like quite the machine! I love projects like this, as they force me to learn new skills, and solve problems I never had before. The best thing a guitar can have is a good story.
Leave a comment:
-
Finally completed this one I ended up routing out all the diseased areas on the top and replacing it with fresh ash. After some black grain filler, a healthy dose of gel stain with a top coat it turned out well.
Getting the Floyd settled was a pain in the rear, but figured it out. The Sh-11 sounds great, and the V-mods are certainly better than the MIM singles I had in that guard previously.
Thanks for the tips, guys
- Likes 2
Leave a comment:
-
Yeah, they came with Alnico II single coils. I think they were the flat ones, but I don't remember. They sounded great in these guitars. One of the best ideas Fender had for their strats in recent years.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by The Dali View Post
Now that i see it i don’t like it, especially with the fact that you would likely seem wood missing ... i think would look for another body option.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I did talk to a friend at Woodcraft, and they have some ash scrap they will give me. I'm thinking, as suggested to fit a chunk of new wood in there. The tolerances are freaking me out, though. I'll have to route into the mount area a bit?
Anyway, I'm going to go with it! I have a spare SH-11 to place in the bridge position. The guitar came with VMOD singles which seem decent. I'll put those in the mid and neck placement. I'm fairly sure these Lite Ash Strat's came from the factory with Seymour Duncan single coils?
Anyone tried a Custom Custom (Sh-11) in Ash?
Thank you for EVERY response. I super appreciate it!Last edited by Ahpook; 02-19-2021, 09:39 PM.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Ahpook View Post
That's where the bridge will be sitting after measuring the scale length and side to side.
Hmm. Not very much real estate there. What do you all think?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Leave a comment:
-
Interesting thread. I will have to face up to a similar job that I have put off until I have acces to somewhere appropriate to carry it out.
I have to replace a non-standard spaced trem with a two point gotoh. One of the posts doesn't line up at all, the other is off-centre, so at some stage I'll have to decide between refilling the post holes and routing out a section of wood and filling with a block...
..or maybe a combination.
Leave a comment:
-
I've had to fix these a lot in my career, and it's very tough - even with ash. Best suggestion is rout and replace with a BIG chunk of ash, like 3 inches square and 1 inch deep at least. Then redrill and rout for fitment. Won't be fun at all, but it should work. Pay attention to your grain when you reglue with hide glue or Titebond. Run it the same direction as the rest of the body.
If your body was alder, it would be even tougher. That is a high stress area, and many times even a repair won't mean more trouble down the road. Good luck!
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by The Dali View PostI noticed those dowels. You could give it a shot... might be enough word there.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Hmm. Not very much real estate there. What do you all think?
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
I noticed those dowels. You could give it a shot... might be enough word there.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Leave a comment:
-
And I will be gluing dowels in the old Strat bridge mount holes. I found some ash dowels that should do ok. Also, I usually deck my Floyd's to the top of the guitar for dive only.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by alex1fly View PostOof. Adding wood to then drill out that same wood and anchor an incredibly touchy tremolo system seems like asking for headaches. You'd have to route an amazingly clean line and get a wicked adherence with the new wood section before even thinking about anchoring anything. Like really clamp the beejeezus out of it. You'd want the wood to be hard wood, I think, and then be verrrry precise with any pilot holes so the new wood doesn't split. Even with these precautions, the new wood will never be as structurally sound as the original wood would be. I have a hard time picturing this guitar performing as pictured over the long term and if it were my project I'd strongly consider fitting something to the existing trem holes. If floating the trem is important, what if you set up a standard Fender trem to float? You only get a few steps worth of bend compared to the Floyd's 3-4 steps, but could be a good compromise. So I guess if you want a project and don't mind it potentially failing down the line, go for it! But if you want it to hold up and hold tune and play great for years to come, or possibly sell to someone else, maybe pass on the Floyd Rose. My two cents.
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
What about the Floyd Rose Rail Tail? Or the VegaTrem? Not the same as a normal Floyd Rose, but might be easier?
Leave a comment:
-
Oof. Adding wood to then drill out that same wood and anchor an incredibly touchy tremolo system seems like asking for headaches. You'd have to route an amazingly clean line and get a wicked adherence with the new wood section before even thinking about anchoring anything. Like really clamp the beejeezus out of it. You'd want the wood to be hard wood, I think, and then be verrrry precise with any pilot holes so the new wood doesn't split. Even with these precautions, the new wood will never be as structurally sound as the original wood would be. I have a hard time picturing this guitar performing as pictured over the long term and if it were my project I'd strongly consider fitting something to the existing trem holes. If floating the trem is important, what if you set up a standard Fender trem to float? You only get a few steps worth of bend compared to the Floyd's 3-4 steps, but could be a good compromise. So I guess if you want a project and don't mind it potentially failing down the line, go for it! But if you want it to hold up and hold tune and play great for years to come, or possibly sell to someone else, maybe pass on the Floyd Rose. My two cents.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: