Lessons learned in my first week trying to build guitars

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.
 
i find making a body a lot easier than making a neck, but having the right tools makes all the difference
 
Necks do seem to be where the work is

One misplaced fret or crooked something
Makes the whole thing trash

It probably isn't as bad once you have made a few

But same goes with everything
 
Yeah, it's better to get the right tools than try to skill your way into the wrong tool working.

As an extreme example, you can perfectly plane a board with a flat head if you are good enough. Does not make it practical or worth your time to do so.
 
Back
Top