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Christine

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Everything posted by Christine

  1. You may find fatter strings might solve it if not you need to find out if the frets are actually flat when the neck is straight. There's no way you can check when the neck is set as by default they should all or nearly all rock. Even Fenders and Gibsons come out of the factory with just frets pressed in and not dressed, that 99% of the time is good enough but occasionally you get a rogue fret that is a little higher or lower
  2. Have you tried to straighten the neck and checked the frets are actually level across the fretboard?
  3. Translucent purple would be nice too but it's not like red is it?
  4. Red, only choice Did I mention I like red?
  5. No one in particular, there seemed to be an idea that it might be a monetary valuable thing, which I think it should be. I think your post hints at it's real value if the neck is good I have a sneaking suspicion it needs no more than a set of strings, a bit of time and a good set up but that is just a guess
  6. No, can't spot the mistake, which means it's huge and right under my nose Nice job on the routing, it looks very good by any standard
  7. I think you're missing the point of it's value, it's not worth much financially but it's value historically is more. It's an Italian made bass that is 55 years old, the fact it is still here is a small miracle let alone in such good condition. It's not an AC30, it's a lesser bass from a time when the buzz was for American instruments. What it might be worth in this condition with a good neck and what someone will pay for it may well be two different numbers, with a bad neck, not a huge amount but still more than with a replacement neck. Just a shame Paul McCartney didn't play one instead of that Hofner. Remember the neck on this is thin, it has two strings on it, old Gibsons get a twist in them that's caused by the tension in the truss rod, it could well be this. We have no idea what has been done to the truss rod over the years, it may well have been wound up tight. Until @Blalpher posts a picture down the neck to show the magnitude of the twist/bend then it's all guesswork at best
  8. Put a set of strings on it and tune it, then put it away in the case for a month, it may well be fine after that. Failing that well, there could be a lot of work involved, it's a classic instrument so you don't want to make a new neck unless you absolutely had no choice. Maybe the fretboard could be lifted off and a couple of carbon rods set in with it dead straight, then refit the fretboard. Whether or not it's worth that expense is another thing, VOX basses don't hold the same value as their AC30s which is a shame, they are lovely instruments, especially in that condition.
  9. Is that all you've done? I expected to see it finished this morning Better
  10. You've got a bunch of drooling bassists here, is it worth repairing? Yes, definitely, look at it, it's gorgeous and a piece of history. I want that bass 🤩 It might be worth putting a set of cheap strings on it and tensioning them, it may well pull the neck straight after a week or two. The twist although not ideal might not be the end of the world as long as the truss rod can still set the neck and there is sufficient bridge adjustment to set the action. Put some strings on it and tune it, then leave it and see what happens, it's lasted 55 years, a few more weeks won't make much of a dent
  11. I do miss my drum sander, it was very handy for a quick tidy up of wood with a horrible grain. I used it an awful lot for thicknessing veneers cut on the bandsaw a job that would be next to impossible any other way. Have you noticed though how it tends to case harden the wood? I find it very much harder to sand the wood from a hand plane, that could be just my imagination of course but that's how I remember it so just curious
  12. Wow, how cool, our singer has a VOX teardrop guitar from those days, I forget the year but it's a nice little thing
  13. One way or another it's repairable, can you post a picture looking down the neck to show the bow and twist?
  14. Wise to practice. When did that damage happen, to me that looks like where you fed the wood into the cutter, am I right? It probably has nothing to do with speed but vibration. If you fed in there you would have been cutting against the grain and also without any support for the cutter as the wood fed in. Next time feed in first where the grain runs exactly sideways like at the side of the body. You'll find that more forgiving to feed in on without causing any damage, after that keep the jig/body in firm contact with both the guide bearing/pin and the router table body to minimise any vibration. Slowly and smoothly, never force it and shallow cuts.
  15. I like the quarter pounders too, I've read a lot of good things about Entwistle pickups on these forums too, cost next to nothing but reports comment they are very very good
  16. Don't use acetone on a nitrocellulose finish, it's fine on poly but it will strip nitro as fast as it takes it off my nails
  17. A vacuum bag and a drum sander, yours? That's looking really good, I do like the detail from the outer veneers in the neck laminates, very classy. What did you think of working with the Rocklite? I'm very impressed with it so far
  18. I'd be tempted to rout out that whole patch around the pickup and set in a new one and start again, you'll get better integrity I would think
  19. Just keep feeding it in the right directionand if the work ends up behind the cutter then you'll be feeding left to right but that is fine because the feed orientation will be the same. Keep the workpiece firmly held down and tight against either the pin or the router bearing. That will minimize vibration and vibration is the source of all evil in wood machining. If you must stop pull the wood away from the cutter then lead back in from the cut edge to prevent burns to the workpiece. It's a lot easier to do than explain. Right direction, shallow cuts and a firm grip and you'll not need too much sanding afterwards
  20. You lying sod You knew damn well that was going to fit before you switched the router on Looking very good
  21. With wood it is opposite; a milling machine has a vice and a sliding table that can hold the work securely but with wood either the work or the machine is being held in someone's hands. You feed the thing your holding so the cutter tips cut into it and exit where there is still wood to be removed. Excuse the rubbish diagram but like this, the other way is dangerous
  22. as that one of the Radian tools cutters? I have one and I think it's the best cutter I've owned for template following
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