Beedster Posted yesterday at 09:06 Posted yesterday at 09:06 Hi folks, I have a bass body with rear access to the control cavity and what can only be described as a number of experimental holes - 7 in total - from the cavity to the front surface of the bass. I want to fill these with dowels, but each hole is a slightly different size so I want to standardise them all at 12mm to allow me to use 12mm dowels for all holes. I was going to use a 12mm drill but suspect that despite being quick and easy it might cause more harm than good, I then thought about using a round file but I imagine that's the hard way and will likely leave me with irregular/not-round holes. Thoughts re tools/techniques welcome 🙏 Quote
Hellzero Posted yesterday at 09:22 Posted yesterday at 09:22 The best way to do it is with a router, Chris. 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted yesterday at 09:24 Posted yesterday at 09:24 Or you can use this tool, if you're doing it slowly, it will be very good: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/264935588930 2 1 Quote
Beedster Posted yesterday at 09:29 Author Posted yesterday at 09:29 4 minutes ago, Hellzero said: Or you can use this tool, if you're doing it slowly, it will be very good: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/264935588930 Tony, that is exactly what I'm looking for I suspect, many thanks mate 🙏 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted yesterday at 09:38 Posted yesterday at 09:38 I'm still using the one my father bought 50 to 60 years ago, but it only goes up to 10 mm and uses a screwdriver handle, so hard on the palm of the hand. 😉 Quote
Beedster Posted yesterday at 09:40 Author Posted yesterday at 09:40 Just now, Hellzero said: I'm still using the one my father bought 50 to 60 years ago, but it only goes up to 10 mm and uses a screwdriver handle, so hard on the palm of the hand. 😉 There's something magnificent about old tools, a mate of mine found one at a boot sale, and a few years later has a collection to rival some bass collections! Thanks for the advice, some jobs require the combination of high attention and effort and low speed 👍 2 Quote
gary mac Posted yesterday at 13:28 Posted yesterday at 13:28 I also tend to use a reamer for this job. Yes, it's slower but just very pleasing. 1 1 Quote
Beedster Posted yesterday at 13:52 Author Posted yesterday at 13:52 23 minutes ago, gary mac said: I also tend to use a reamer for this job. Yes, it's slower but just very pleasing. There are time when power tools spoil the fun 👍 Quote
BlueMoon Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago When enlarging headstock tuner holes I’ve used successfully either a hand-held reamer (as suggested by @Hellzero) or a step drill bit with a drill chuck and t-bar handle. Slow and steady by hand………just watch out for chips occurring in the surface coating (poly worse than nitro). If you can locate centrally a washer or coin of the desired final hole size, pre-score around it with a sharp scribe. This will help minimise chips and serve as a guide for the drill/reamer. 1 Quote
Beedster Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago 37 minutes ago, BlueMoon said: When enlarging headstock tuner holes I’ve used successfully either a hand-held reamer (as suggested by @Hellzero) or a step drill bit with a drill chuck and t-bar handle. Slow and steady by hand………just watch out for chips occurring in the surface coating (poly worse than nitro). If you can locate centrally a washer or coin of the desired final hole size, pre-score around it with a sharp scribe. This will help minimise chips and serve as a guide for the drill/reamer. Thanks, and interestingly I bought not only a hand-held reamer today but also a step drill bit! I'm aiming to use the former but will have the latter on standby. I love the fact that whatever job you need to do, someone has invented a tool. However, there is one major problem - knowing what that tool is called! I'd never heard of a step drill until I searched reamer and they appeared low in the results 🤔 This is the body in question, I'm hoping next time I post a photo it looks a whole lot better 2 Quote
PaulThePlug Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago (edited) Wood 'Plugs' would(!) Be better as Dowel will show End Grain, which might need attention before a finish. Or... Edited 21 hours ago by PaulThePlug 1 1 Quote
Beedster Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago 8 minutes ago, PaulThePlug said: Wood 'Plugs' would(!) Be better as Dowel will show End Grain, which might need attention before a finish. Or... Thanks Paul, luckily the 12mm dowels appear to have a grain running across, I'll have to wait and see but I'm optimistic 👍 2 Quote
Beer of the Bass Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 18 hours ago, PaulThePlug said: Wood 'Plugs' would(!) Be better as Dowel will show End Grain, which might need attention before a finish. Or... I'm enjoying the poster name/content congruence going on here! 1 Quote
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