Oh just being an idiot again.....
Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 2:36 am
It's been a long while since I made that "stupid" a@# mistake everyone does everyone once in a while....
Well here it is...
First off, don't work on stuff at 1:15 am when you have to be up at 6:30, it makes you rush as I was going to attempt to fret my fingerboard as well.
Anyhow, decided to bind my headstock, after it was already perfectly flush cut, and could have been good to go. Bad idea??? Not yet, actually a great one.
So I spend the past 4 hours (Awful lighting, and shafty tools at my disposal today at home) using a hair curling iron to bend the maple binding. I finally have come up with my first headstock design that I'm actually really happy with, and to make things look good I put alot of time into the process. So after the 3-4 hours it look great, and I block planed the binding flush to the headstock and so I've got the overhead to deal with. This binding is maybe hanging over 1/32" and maybe 3/32 tall, so not much material.
"Hey, I've got a great idea... After spending 4 hours of tedious work, I'll save 5 minutes by flush trim cutting this maple using my template I can't center up anymore, despite the fact that I know it won't work, and that it would only take seconds to scrap."
Sure as shit, it didn't work, but since I'm as tired as I am, I didn't have any second thoughts.
So what happened?? -
Well, it flushed it up in 1 spot. Apparently the template was sitting in further than the neck its self and it made my headstock smaller, no big deal, right, just reshape your headstock? Oh, but wait, now my new bound headstock has a butchered maple binding all the way around with varying thickness from paper thin, to just where it should be.
I haven't been so close to crying in years. A headstock I could actually take pride in because it was mine, and it looked banging. Didn't even snap pictures because I was going to wait for the "clean" part.
Oh well, now I get to spend a few more hours fixing my mistake just to make it look "acceptable"
Long story short, don't be a dumbass. Unfortunately though, it takes being one to realize to not do it.
-Dan
Well here it is...
First off, don't work on stuff at 1:15 am when you have to be up at 6:30, it makes you rush as I was going to attempt to fret my fingerboard as well.
Anyhow, decided to bind my headstock, after it was already perfectly flush cut, and could have been good to go. Bad idea??? Not yet, actually a great one.
So I spend the past 4 hours (Awful lighting, and shafty tools at my disposal today at home) using a hair curling iron to bend the maple binding. I finally have come up with my first headstock design that I'm actually really happy with, and to make things look good I put alot of time into the process. So after the 3-4 hours it look great, and I block planed the binding flush to the headstock and so I've got the overhead to deal with. This binding is maybe hanging over 1/32" and maybe 3/32 tall, so not much material.
"Hey, I've got a great idea... After spending 4 hours of tedious work, I'll save 5 minutes by flush trim cutting this maple using my template I can't center up anymore, despite the fact that I know it won't work, and that it would only take seconds to scrap."
Sure as shit, it didn't work, but since I'm as tired as I am, I didn't have any second thoughts.
So what happened?? -
Well, it flushed it up in 1 spot. Apparently the template was sitting in further than the neck its self and it made my headstock smaller, no big deal, right, just reshape your headstock? Oh, but wait, now my new bound headstock has a butchered maple binding all the way around with varying thickness from paper thin, to just where it should be.
I haven't been so close to crying in years. A headstock I could actually take pride in because it was mine, and it looked banging. Didn't even snap pictures because I was going to wait for the "clean" part.
Oh well, now I get to spend a few more hours fixing my mistake just to make it look "acceptable"
Long story short, don't be a dumbass. Unfortunately though, it takes being one to realize to not do it.
-Dan