
The guitar is a 50 year old all laminated Japanese-made "lawsuit" Takamine that suffered from heat stress at some point in its life before and during my ownership of it. The bridge came up and took part of the laminated top with it. I contributed to it by sawing off the neck poorly after discovering that it wasn't a dovetail joint. The saw bot through the outer veneer and even well into the next layer, but the heel covers most of it. I confess it looks pretty ugly but I see it as a challenge.
Here is the scope of the project. I realize that it is not representative of any single repair/restoration project. I see this more as 4 projects in one and even if I don't completely restore this guitar at least I will have at least (possibly) picked up valuable skills. I'm looking forward to the tinkering aspect of it.
1: replace the top/binding/purfling. I just did something similar on a scratch build. I was hoping to save the binding but I look forward to improving my skills in that area as well.
2: repair damaged side veneer around the neck joint. I have black veneer to overlay the affected area but the cosmetics will be the challenge.
3: convert to a bolt on butt joint. Aligning the neck will be the challenge for me but I already have the jigs and I've used threaded inserts before - just not with so long of a bolt.
4: replace the fretboard. I've seen it done with a clothes iron and a Japanese pull saw. I probably won't replace it with another rosewood fretboard.
This won't be a high priority project but I need to do something with this other than to hold my wooden cauls under my workbench. It would be nice to hear this guitar sing again since I made a lot of progress as a player on it. I may even try to find it a new home if one of my kids doesn't want it.