classical disaster recovered :D
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Re: continuing along on my classical.
Yeah John, it looks good.
Boy that top has some really nice silking going on there...it will be a beauty under the finish.
Are you french polishing?
Kevin
Boy that top has some really nice silking going on there...it will be a beauty under the finish.
Are you french polishing?
Kevin
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Re: continuing along on my classical.
Thanks, I did not notice the silking untill I started sanding the top with 120g against the grain. I did get excited when I saw it show up under the sand paper. I am going to do a true french polish on this guitar. I will fill the back and sides with zpoxy though. One pumice fill was enough for me.Kevin Sjostrand wrote:Yeah John, it looks good.
Boy that top has some really nice silking going on there...it will be a beauty under the finish.
Are you french polishing?
Kevin
One design issue I am thinking about is to keep the white purfling on the back a clean white or to let the IRW oil stain it to tone it down. I will sit on it for a bit. In any case the shellac with turn it a bit amber.
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Re: continuing along on my classical.
John,
I would suggest not getting stain on the purfling, but the shellac over might give it a nice "old" look....could be pretty neat.
Kevin
I would suggest not getting stain on the purfling, but the shellac over might give it a nice "old" look....could be pretty neat.
Kevin
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Re: continuing along on my classical.
Thanks Kevin,Kevin Sjostrand wrote:John,
I would suggest not getting stain on the purfling, but the shellac over might give it a nice "old" look....could be pretty neat.
Kevin
I will keep the purflings clean, I have been sanding the back and sides and my 5 line purfling is growing on me. At least the work is coming out clean. All and all I think this will turn out as a nice guitar. It is the cleanest that I kept the top - no small dents.
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Re: continuing along on my classical.
Near disaster. While gluing on the fretboard I did not have the guitar held in place and it flipped right off of the work bench. Luckily the clamps broke the fall and I have not found any real damage except a small chip from the top between the rosette and the sound hole. I cut the edges of the chiped area with a wedge shape and made a matching wedge of a cutoff to glue in place. It looks like it will disappeare.
Anyway the fretboard is glued on and the guitar is ready for sanding, fill and french polish.
Anyway the fretboard is glued on and the guitar is ready for sanding, fill and french polish.
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Re: continuing along on my classical.
Not quite a near disaster, when I went to pore fill the classical I found that a giant crack had opened on the back, including a brace ripped form the back. I assume it was damage from the fall that just took awhile to show up.johnnparchem wrote:Near disaster. While gluing on the fretboard I did not have the guitar held in place and it flipped right off of the work bench. Luckily the clamps broke the fall and I have not found any real damage except a small chip from the top between the rosette and the sound hole. I cut the edges of the chiped area with a wedge shape and made a matching wedge of a cutoff to glue in place.
I took the binding and purflings off with a heat gun and a putty knife. Removed the back, chiseled the kerfing off, and cleaned the whole thing up. I got more wood for back and mostly put it back together this weekend.
I know I should of taken some pictures of the mess but I was not real happy. A couple of days later I got to the point that it is just an opprotunity to practice my skills. The pictured posted are where I am now.
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Re: classical disaster :<
What persistance! Not sure I would be willing to go through all that. I hate re-work!!!!!!!!!!
David L
David L
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Re: classical disaster recovered :D
I am back to where I was but actually better. When the guitar fell and cracked the back, I had extra perfling lines from router error. The back strip was not perfectly lined up with the tail graft. With the new back, I color match is OK, but I have my orginal black white perfling scheme and the end graft lines up perfectly with the back strip. I also got a little extra practice on some of my skills. A little extra work, but a disaster and a guitar recovered.
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Re: classical disaster recovered :D
NICE!! So an accident forced your hand to do a repair you wanted to do anyway! I am glad it worked out and I hope it does not happen again!