Lap Steel Project Questions

skh515

New member
I’m finalizing the plans for my lap steel project. It should be warming up soon, so working in the shop will be easier, plus my father who is a better woodworker is just about recovered from his knee surgery and Shingles.

I have all the parts I need and have been doing final measurements and adjusting the AutoCAD files.

Yes Lew, it would have been easier to just buy one, but why spend $300 on a vintage lap steel, when you can build your own for three times that price? That is my Uncle Sam’s attitude.

O.K., here are the facts:

The string spacing at the Hipshot Trilogy is 0.40.”
The roller bridge is adjustable to 0.40.”
The JB Trembucker is 0.414” between the poles. I could have used a standard JB, but I don’t think it’s going to matter.
The Hipshot roller Nut has a 0.35” spacing.

I was hoping to keep the string spacing equal the entire length of the guitar. I could use a second roller bridge as a roller nut. Being guitar players, you will probably realize that 0.050” is about the width of a low E string. In fact, the GHS Boomer 11s I’m working with have a .050 E string. This is not a hung change in spring spread. The bridge spread is 2.0” and the Nut spread is 1.75”

Questions:
Is this close enough, or should I pursue a different roller nut?
Should I keep the spread at the tuners 2.0” in case I change the nut later, or should I narrow it to 1.75”?

Distance from bridge to JB?
I have set the distance at 1.15” from the top of the saddle to the edge of the Humbucker. Should the JB be closer to the bridge or is this a good distance?

I wanted a flat radius, but the roller bridge is a 20” radius (almost flat). I used the archtop model and have discarded the lower half. I plan on bolting the bridge directly to the body. This will give me a string height of about 0.0625” (5/8”) at the bridge. The nut height is about 0.50” If I raise the “Fretboard” 1/8” the string height should be equal the entire length.

If I use a second roller bridge at the nut, the height and radius will be equal.
Should I use another roller bridge at the nut?

I am open to any and all suggestions, you masters of steel.
Humbly,
Steve
 
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Re: Lap Steel Project Questions

Hi Steve, Why do you want a roller nut? Unless you are using a vibrato mechanism you don't need a roller nut. IMO, roller nuts (and moving parts in general) just compromise the tone.

My lap steels (old Rickenbackers, Supros and Fenders) all have bone, bakelite or a steel nut and a simple non-adjustable bridge.

I'd keep it very simple and with no moving parts. You're not building a pedal steel...you're building a lap steel, right?

Lew
 
Re: Lap Steel Project Questions

Hey Lew,

No it's not a Pedal Steel. But I am putting a Hipshot Trilogy on it. So, I want the strings to be able to move with as little resistance as possible when I activate the various, and numerous, levers for the different tunings. I think this will increase the accuracy of the tunings, or at least I hope it will.

Steve
 
Re: Lap Steel Project Questions

I see. Well....to each his own I guess. I'd keep it simple: better tone.

Lew
 
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