Trim Sides Before or After Bending
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Trim Sides Before or After Bending
As the category says, these are beginners questions and that would be me. All of my builds so far have either been kits where are the sides are trimmed and bent or builds where the sides have been trimmed and bent for me. I am now moving towards building from scratch having to perform these two operations myself.
So my question is, do you trim your sides before bending or after? I know you can buy a side template from LMI for dreads and OM sides. But I am currently starting a build of an OO size body. What do y’all recommend in this case?
Thanks
So my question is, do you trim your sides before bending or after? I know you can buy a side template from LMI for dreads and OM sides. But I am currently starting a build of an OO size body. What do y’all recommend in this case?
Thanks
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
Thanks Diane. I’m getting ready to build two OO, 14 fret projects. I found a design drawing for this model on LMI. I’ll be able to trace a side templet from this. Thanks for the advice!
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
I think we need to verify terminology and nomenclature
first you want to shape the sides to match the geometry you want IE 000 15 foot radius or 20 foot dred
allow extra length trimming is setting the length of the sides to fit the mold
Driving the bus will do the final shaping.
first you want to shape the sides to match the geometry you want IE 000 15 foot radius or 20 foot dred
allow extra length trimming is setting the length of the sides to fit the mold
Driving the bus will do the final shaping.
John Hall
Blues Creek Guitars Inc
Authorized CF Martin Repair Center
president of Association of Stringed Instrument Artisans
http://www.bluescreekguitars.com
Blues Creek Guitars Inc
Authorized CF Martin Repair Center
president of Association of Stringed Instrument Artisans
http://www.bluescreekguitars.com
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
Yes - I could read this two ways: 1) trimming to length and 2) trimming to profile.
1) Trimming to length: no - this is done after the sides are bent and being fitted to the mold. You want some extra on each end so place your sides accordingly.
2) Trimming to profile: as John mentions its recommended to rough out the side profile before bending - leaving some extra for the final fitting process with the radius dish. Most plans have a separate layout for the side profile. If you forget you can also do the rough profiling after bending, but either way you want to do it before you get the sides glued up in the mold, much easier doing it beforehand.
1) Trimming to length: no - this is done after the sides are bent and being fitted to the mold. You want some extra on each end so place your sides accordingly.
2) Trimming to profile: as John mentions its recommended to rough out the side profile before bending - leaving some extra for the final fitting process with the radius dish. Most plans have a separate layout for the side profile. If you forget you can also do the rough profiling after bending, but either way you want to do it before you get the sides glued up in the mold, much easier doing it beforehand.
"Facts seldom sway an opinion." - John Hall
"The difference between theory and practice is that in theory there is no difference." - Van de Snepscheut
"The difference between theory and practice is that in theory there is no difference." - Van de Snepscheut
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
Yes - I could read this two ways: 1) trimming to length and 2) trimming to profile
I guess this is what happens when a beginner tries to ask someone who knows what they are talking about a question. Sorry about that. I was referring to the side profile. John and I have been discussing this for several days and it takes me a lot longer to get some concepts thru my head. I believe I’m on the correct path now (just not very far down it). Thanks to all for the input.
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
Took the post out...
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
Diane, I am not a very experienced forum poster. What does that mean?
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
Haha, I'm a beginner too - it's just that my first one was from scratch so I ran into all this on my first go-round. I started it in early 2019 and finished about 6 months ago so it took a bit. Now I've started my second and it's been so long I've forgotten a lot of how it goes, so I'm really glad you're asking these questions!
"Facts seldom sway an opinion." - John Hall
"The difference between theory and practice is that in theory there is no difference." - Van de Snepscheut
"The difference between theory and practice is that in theory there is no difference." - Van de Snepscheut
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
It just means I deleted my post since it was so confusing. It was a quick answer and I should have been more thorough.
This is your sequence:
1. Thin the wood first. I thin my sides to 0.75-0.85", depending on the wood flexibility.
2. Profile your sides. This means simply shaping them. I've made a very bad drawing for you. But, leave the length and make it as long as your wood. I just trace the pattern from your plan onto a paper (pattern paper is cheap). But, just make it longer at each end. You'll cut off the excess after bending.
3. Bend.
NOTE: #1 & 2 can be switched. Just make sure you thin the sides before bending too.
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Re: Trim Sides Before or After Bending
I don't lose a lot of sleep over precision in profiling the sides. As John mentioned, driving the bus will level things off nicely. I do leave my kerfing a bit proud of the sides so the back and top will have the greatest possible contact with the kerfing after sanding.
The sides will be sacrificed when the binding channels are cut, hence my lack of worry, the sides are going to get cut away anyway.
The sides will be sacrificed when the binding channels are cut, hence my lack of worry, the sides are going to get cut away anyway.
peter havriluk