Chistopher
malapterurus electricus tonewood instigator
2" is the ideal thickness for the body blank. Any thicker than that is unnecessary.
Respect goes a long way buying wood at a lumber mill
A two piece body is cheaper to make than a three piece body because a 8 foot board that is 6" wide can make one guitar, but an 8 foot board that is 8" wide can make two. You waste a lot less with an 8" board
The biggest thing you are looking for in a board at a lumber mill for a guitar (as opposed to normal use) is the grain pattern and the depth
A jointer is not a planer
Duplicate your templates
HyperTough does not belong in your tool box
Technique is no replacement for planning
Wax your power tools if they need them
A hand planer has to be setup in a very specific way to be useful
You make a square board by jointing an edge, using a table saw to square the other edge, and then planing both faces. I already knew this, but I didn't fully appreciate it until now. From my mathematical days, I find it neat that you have to do a "proof" before you assume a board to be square, flat, or parallel.
If you f**k up a Telecaster it's not problem turning it into a cutting board.
Nothing wrong with failure if you don't get hurt.
This being said, I have not managed to produce a single viable guitar body yet, but I strive off of iterated failure.
Respect goes a long way buying wood at a lumber mill
A two piece body is cheaper to make than a three piece body because a 8 foot board that is 6" wide can make one guitar, but an 8 foot board that is 8" wide can make two. You waste a lot less with an 8" board
The biggest thing you are looking for in a board at a lumber mill for a guitar (as opposed to normal use) is the grain pattern and the depth
A jointer is not a planer
Duplicate your templates
HyperTough does not belong in your tool box
Technique is no replacement for planning
Wax your power tools if they need them
A hand planer has to be setup in a very specific way to be useful
You make a square board by jointing an edge, using a table saw to square the other edge, and then planing both faces. I already knew this, but I didn't fully appreciate it until now. From my mathematical days, I find it neat that you have to do a "proof" before you assume a board to be square, flat, or parallel.
If you f**k up a Telecaster it's not problem turning it into a cutting board.
Nothing wrong with failure if you don't get hurt.
This being said, I have not managed to produce a single viable guitar body yet, but I strive off of iterated failure.