Hand Tool moments -- and a Hack -- from 2024 guitar build
#9
Some time earlier this year I only posted a couple of these pictures.
I was off work several months, and I killed some time making a small guitar.  It is really to my liking, even if not fully polished and professional.


I used rift-saw Red Oak for the back and sides...  not a best-selling choice, but it has a sound I very much like.


Using the No. 6 to thickness one of the sides prior to bending:


   



Bending the side with a thrift-store curling iron:

   



Smoothing the back joints with my ECE Emmerich horn plane:

   



Installing a hand-curled rosette into a round slot cut with my Lee Valley string inlay cutter:

   



Cutting a place for a "beauty splice" where the 2 curved sides come together:

   



Inserting a thin wedge to beautify that joint:

   



More to follow!
Chris
Reply
#10
More stuff...


Using a shop-made miter box and my thinnest saw to tightly cut fret slots:

   



Hand carving a neck profile:

   



First playing moments:

   



Lately -- courtesy of Putin's hackers -- my exact doppelgänger has shown up on YouTube:

   
Chris
Reply
#11
Very nice work -  the photos show it well.
Reply
#12
Well done sir.  Was this your first one?
Semper Fi,

Barry
Reply
#13
Nice job. I've never even considered oak as a tonewood. How would you characterize the tone? I own 4 acoustic guitars but never considered building one.
Still Learning,

Allan Hill
Reply
#14
I know nothing about guitars, but I do recognize quality hand work when I see it.  Thank you for posting.
"I tried being reasonable..........I didn't like it." Clint Eastwood
Reply
#15
Wow. A beatiful and usefull music instrument. That is the subdiscipline of woodworking I admire the most!


Take Care,
Pedder
Reply
#16
Thank you all!


In response to the questions:

It is my 2nd build, and the first time essentially from scratch.   My 2022 build was with a body using walnut and mahogany-- OK, but I had made the back too thin and it sounds a little tubby.

This 2024 build, I wanted to make it from everyday stuff, and reading up I had seen that oak was usually avoided only for the open grain appearance, and not for the sonics.  Sonically I would place it close to rosewood.  It's really a delight, and I think I got the top and back resonances and thicknesses to work, quite fortunately.

The Russian hacker obviously went for a solid-body instead.  
Smile
Chris
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)

Product Recommendations

Here are some supplies and tools we find essential in our everyday work around the shop. We may receive a commission from sales referred by our links; however, we have carefully selected these products for their usefulness and quality.