Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Top side profiled

I finished profiling the top side a few days ago, just didn't snap a picture until now.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Making a 30' Sanding Dish

I know that most people say you don't need a sanding dish, but I can see the advantages of having one since it can be used for both truing up the sides and bracing the top/back. So I thought I'd give it a try for the 30 foot radius dish used for the top. After thinking about it for a few days, I came up with what I thought was the quickest and easiest way to do it. I didn't want to have to make any special jigs, I thought I could route it free hand. I calculated the depth based on the formula for a circle: x**2 + y**2 = r**2, solve for x given r = 30*12 and y being the radius from the center of the dish. I then printed this out in 1/4" increments.
First step was to draw concentric radii of the 2 foot diameter disk in 1 inch increments. Then route out each ring to the appropriate depth with a 3/8" router bit. The trick though is to not route the WHOLE ring, but to leave a small sliver each time so the router base has the original surface to ride on for subsequent rings.
Once this was done, I came back and routed out the slivers and then used a chisel to take out any rough spots. Since this board is MDF, a chisel goes through it like butter. Then I got my $20 random orbit sander (from Harbor Freight) and began to sand.
At first, it didn't seem like I was getting anywhere. But all of a sudden, the lines just started to smooth out and disappear.
It was easier and turned out better than I anticipated, the whole thing took about 2.5 hours. Now I can get back to working on the sides.
A 30' dish has a max depth of 0.200", the difference in depth between any of the rings was only a few mils on the inner part, and grew to about 1/32" over the last inch. Therefore 1" increments worked fine. But this difference will double when I make the 15' dish for the back. I probably will want to space the rings closer together on the outer part of the 15' dish to lessen the sanding required.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Blocks glued

Last night I first glued the end block...


... and two hours later I glued the heel block:

I'll pop it out of the mold tonight and see how it turned out.

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Sides cut



Last night I cut the sides to length, I then put the sides back in the mold.

I fitted the neck and neck block together. The top of the neck block is about 1/32" below the top of the neck. This gap needs to be the same as my top thickness... which isn't finalized yet. It will probably be in the 0.100" area, so a 1/16" or more will have to come off the top of the neck block prior to gluing it to the sides.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Neck and other pieces

Top-Bottom: Macassar Ebony fretboard, macassar ebony bridge blank, macassar ebony headplate, extra macassar ebony bridge blank for tuning knobs, madagascar rosewood bridge plate.
Left-Right on the side: figured maple end wedge, plain maple headplate veneer.

The top three macassar ebony pieces all have similar color/figure, which is good. The bridge plate has very interesting color/figure... I didn't expect that.

I measured the neck and heel block for fit. The neck is 1-2 mils oversides and currently won't fit in the healblock. I will sand down the neck part when fitting it later. For now, the heel block is good to go for gluing to the sides after I put a slight radius on it.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Sides in mold

We were out of town this weekend, but before we left I managed to clamp the sides in the mold. I clamped each one in separately since they need to be trimmed before they will both fit at the same time.


I'd like to trim the sides and glue up the head/tail blocks but given that the humidity level is still 60%, I probably should wait. There are plenty of other things to do.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Finally, it's HERE!


Yes that's right, after 23 days it finally arrived. I'm not terribly happy about that (LMI said it is typically 10 days), but there is no need to "fret" about it. The top looks real nice, the bearclaw texture is hard to see in this picture. I'm still getting used to the back, not sure what I think about it. The sapwood center is not quite on center, but I've seen a lot worse. And there is a lot of bow in it no doubt from humidity... hopefully that will either go away or can be fixed.


The rest of the stuff looks great. I especially like the macassar ebony fingerboard.


I'll work on putting the sides in the mold tonight. I probably should order the kerfing soon too. This shows the other side of the back. The sapwood appears to be better mirrored. Neither picture does the top justice... the bearclaw texture is very nice.