I finished bracing the top today, and started roughing in the scalloping of the braces. Scalloping the braces makes the top more flexible and thus the guitar is louder.
So from here I need to....
Carve nexk ~ 2 hrs
Install frets ~ 3 hrs
Profile sides ~ 2 hrs
attach top to sides to back ~ 3 hrs
Install tuners ~ .5 hrs
Make the bridge ~ 3 hrs
Install binding ~ 1.5
Attach neck ~ 1.5 hrs
install bridge ~ .5 hrs
Sand ~ 4 hrs
Finish ~ 4 hrs
-----------------------------------------
Total ~ 25 hrs
Luckily I have a 3 day weekend coming up so I should get pretty far and hopefully I'll have this most of the way done soon.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Sides, Neck, and Back
So I got alot done...
I cut the sides to length and glued on the endblock. The sides look pretty good, the shape is like the bastard child of a Dreadnought and a Grand Symphony
I tapered the neck, cut the headstock profile (the top has a sinusoidal profile....yeah I'm a nerd)
I finished bracing the back, and started scalloping the braces. Scalloping the braces on the top or back lightens the guitar and allows the top/back to resonate more readily and thus louder and brings out the midtones and the higher frequencies.
P.S. I decided that my next project is going to be a mandola. For a while in the 1920's, Mandolin orchestras were popular. The four instruments in the mandolin family are the mandolin (as we know it today), the mandola (tuned the same as a viola), the octave mandolin (tuned an octave below the mandolin) and the mandocello (tuned the same as a cello.) That build will have to wait until I finish this guitar, but it shouldn't be too difficult so I'm hoping sometime before the end of the school year...I'll probably rent an apartment and get an internship/job somewhere this summer (then its off to college...)
I cut the sides to length and glued on the endblock. The sides look pretty good, the shape is like the bastard child of a Dreadnought and a Grand Symphony
I tapered the neck, cut the headstock profile (the top has a sinusoidal profile....yeah I'm a nerd)
I finished bracing the back, and started scalloping the braces. Scalloping the braces on the top or back lightens the guitar and allows the top/back to resonate more readily and thus louder and brings out the midtones and the higher frequencies.

Sunday, January 4, 2009
Bending the sides
I finally bent the sides. It was easier than I expected, just time consuming...It took me a while to get the hang of it, but after that it was pretty straight-forward. I soaked the wood for about 25 minutes, and then slowly bent the sides over a section of pipe with a 300 watt lightbulb inside (to heat up the pipe.)
It takes a while (about 30 seconds) for the wood to become pliable but then it bends pretty easily. There were a couple areas with grain tearout but nothing that won't get sanded off.
In other news, I started bracing the back
Pictures below....


It takes a while (about 30 seconds) for the wood to become pliable but then it bends pretty easily. There were a couple areas with grain tearout but nothing that won't get sanded off.
In other news, I started bracing the back
Pictures below....
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