It's sounds and plays awesome. I used it for the up coming Ace Frehley tribute we are doing. It has a Duncan hybrid 59/CC A2 PuP .Great job man!!
How does it sound and play now?
I used Reranch clear. At 1st I wanted a unique color,So I dreamed up that Bourbon Burst Idea. I had it ! but then I tried to to tweak it and screwed it all up. So I sanded it off for a more traditional color.J Moose said:Yeah man!
That looks killer!!! I was diggin' on the binding too...wondering if you had taped it...
I remember when you posted pics of the first stain job, I guess you went back and darkened the edges a bit?
What did you use for a clear coat?
It was a B.I.N. for $360. I emailed the seller for more pics.He never lied in his discripetion `Amatuer headstock repair... Need a pro repair' but he took very good pics to coverup how bad this thing was FUBAR!El Dorado said:Awesome. Better than new. How much did you give for that thing with the broken headstock?
The truss rod cavity was filled with gorilla glue. Had to skillfully chip a the glue out! Thank God the rod turned.tone4days said:was there a chunk outta the neck too? ... the 5th pic ('ready for epoxy') in the first photoshow seems to show a lot of exposed truss rod or something ... what is that?
The truss rod cavity was filled with gorilla glue. Had to skillfully chip a the glue out! Thank God the rod turned.
What you see in pic 5 is a 2 inch deck screw. There was only a small area in which to glue on the bass side. I was afraid when I drilled for a dowel hole the whole thing could bust off! (then I'd be scewed) Instead of building a jig,
I inserted the deck screw for stablity while working on the other side. Once I
had the bass side glued and doweled. I removed the screw and installed a steel roll pin in this place.Then I started to fill it with Stewmac black slo-set epoxy. ( took several weeks to bullt it up)
WOW!!!
How long did the repair take from start to finish?
Was it your first headstock repair or have you done this before?! heheheh