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Guitar plan
Posted: Tue Feb 12, 2013 5:09 pm
by Haggis
Hi,
I've started a new build and i'm searching for a d28 guitar plan. Stewmac sells a "herringbone
dreadnaught" guitar plan. My first build was a kit fr.o.m. Bluescreek and all details was pre drawn on the top and back. As i build a mold for the first one i'd like to use it again. So if the outline is the same? ...then i'll by the plan from stewmac.
/häggis
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Tue Feb 12, 2013 5:34 pm
by tippie53
that will work. It is close and will make a fair reference for you
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Tue Feb 12, 2013 9:55 pm
by B. Howard
It will fit into a Martin D size case nicely.
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Sun Jun 30, 2013 9:46 am
by Tom West
Stew-Mac's plan for a dread guitar is one of the better plans on the market. Lots of plans and book instruction show over built bracing. Stew-Mac is more in line with what is required for an excellent guitar IMHO of course.
Tom
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Sun Jun 30, 2013 10:28 am
by tippie53
I agree that the MacRostie plan is one of the better ones. Martin actually used that in the kits years ago. One little fact Martin never had a blue print for anything until the 70's when Dick Boak got hired. That was his job to create the blueprints . Up to that point they used Foremans notes. I got to research in the Martin Archive and saw these hash marks on the notes. Mike Dickinson explained they are the amount of shims used on a particular jig.
I had documented a total of 5 1937 D28s now and had patterns made up from the information. In all 5 cases there were slight differences but nothing too out of the ordinary . In all the Stew Mac plan is within 1/8 in of what I saw and I agree that is within the specs martin was using at the time.
It is a great base line to start from.
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2013 5:46 pm
by Zen
Scott Antes plan for a Parlor was a bit lacking in info at least for a beginner. I found the stew mac dreadnought much more informative and it came with a dvd as well when i purchased the kit. Probably wouldn't build another one though as it was a bit of a nightmare with the dovetail neck joint .
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2013 7:13 pm
by tippie53
macRostie was much better than the antes drawing
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Fri Jul 19, 2013 12:04 pm
by Zen
tippie53 wrote:macRostie was much better than the antes drawing
Many Thanks John , Speaking of plans I dont see much info on Scott antes parlor plan on where to set the bridge on the body ? Would you be able to advise me what to do to set it . The scale is 24.9 and its a 12th fret join at the body
Maybe the measurements are actually there on the plan but i don't see it right now.
Any advise appreciated
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Fri Jul 19, 2013 5:55 pm
by Zen
Many Thanks Runningdog.
Whats the thinking about the B especially ? Just wondering
Cheers
Rusty
Re: Guitar plan
Posted: Fri Jul 26, 2013 12:33 pm
by Zen
Runningdog wrote:Saddle location:
Double the distance from the nut to the 12th.
Add .15"
That's the distance from the nut to the center of the saddle, right up the center line (between D and G strings).
Other people measure differently, such as to each end of the saddle, but if the angle of compensation is correct this is consistently the best correction. See Cumpiano & Natelson for more info.
You also need to ramp the saddle from back to front for each string, especially the B. There are (again) numerous ways of doing this ... whatever works for you.
Thanks, Just checking something so that I can get my head around it. Does that work for every scale.
Its a parlor --Scott antes plan-- and Lmi encourage people who buy this kit to build with 24.9 scale so thats what I'm shooting for. The plan says a different scale but for some reason LMI do it differently.
So, just wondering will the method above work for this scale on a parlor ? Is that how you guys work out the bridge position on all guitars
Thanks for all the great advise here
Rusty