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Mark |
Closing the Body
Here is the top going on:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...742453d1_c.jpg And the back: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...2a8b0c68_c.jpg Look how that Bloodwood just glows in the spotlight: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...baf48f27_b.jpg |
Cleaning up the Body
I have the guitar body closed and have the Black Ebony binding, end graft, etc. in. Now it is time to clean all that up and since this is a tool orientated build thread here are the tools I use to get the job done:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...225c7b10_c.jpg I'll start at the top and go on around. First we have my newest acquisition an HNT Gordon curve bottomed spoke shave: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...aa1c8bb9_c.jpg The curved bottom lets me get into curved areas like the waist and inside cutaways. It helps with the heel on necks as well. The blade can be reversed which switches it from a plane to a scraper. It has a thick blade and a nice weight to reduce chatter. It's a great tool that goes where others can't. Then comes this Lie-Nielsen hobby palm plane: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...92a202c1_c.jpg I use this one mostly to clean up the top and back binding and purfling. It is small enough to manage around curves. This plane, like many of the quality contemporary wood planes has a thick blade which allows for nice smooth controllable cuts. Next up is this thick scraper designed by Alan Carruth: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...05e0e77c_c.jpg This is a very rigid scraper plane with a very thick blade. Are you starting to see a pattern here? Contemporary woodworking tools and some scrapers have gone the route of putting some weight behind the blades. Why? Because it works better. It turns what is normally a frustrating, tedious clean up job into well, a less frustrating tedious job. Finally we have the spring steel Crucible scraper plane: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...71294b6b_c.jpg This is a relatively new design, although it does not have a thick blade the scrapers edge is curved (unlike a typical card scraper) This allows you to use it without having to bend the curve into it. It works both as a push or pull scraper. This is a nice fast scraper for cleaning up larger areas with out wearing your thumbs out. So besides the ease of use part what makes these better? Well One is they don't leave little pig tail marks in the wood like an orbital sander does. The amount of wood you are removing is a lot more controllable than with a power sander. The wood surface is easier to keep flat like when you are flattening the harder binding on the same plane as the softwood top. Hand sanding and power sanders tend to leave little gullies in the softer wood. You are not smashing saw dust into the wood pores so the finished wood is cleaner and the figure is more defined. |
This great! Thanks for all the specific information on the tools and their manufacturers. Since I only build a couple guitars a year, I can take my time and enjoy the process, and having the “right” tool just magnifies the enjoyment.
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That Bloodwood looks amazing, Mark!
And although I'm not much of a fine woodworker (being a carpenter for quite a stint), I really appreciate your dedication to hand tools and the detailed explanations you've shared thus far. I never have considered the difference between sanding and scraping and how it affects the wood fibers. But your explanations make perfect sense and I can see how it would affect the surface and the finish look of the wood. Thanks for the education and taking us on this journey! |
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Mr. natural
Mr. natural knows best! I've been thinking about that reference all the way through this thread, so thanks for posting the image!
Carry on Mark Salud Paul |
Arm Bevel
Here is a quick progress picture. The arm bevel is starting to come together:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...98beee7d_c.jpg Thanks for viewing! Mark |
This is stunning work and I'm envious of all of your tools, Mark. Excuse my ignorance, but how did you rout for binding?
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Here is a thread on the Build and Repair forum where I posted the router jig I made and I have updated it with improvements I made over the years: https://www.acousticguitarforum.com/...hlight=Hatcher Mark |
My favorite thread
This is currently my favorite thread in Custom Shop! My hope is that you will update it occasionally even after you finish this gorgeous bloodwood guitar, as you acquire new hand tools and techniques.
I'm curious: how many of these techniques were used on my Woodsman? Did its old-time aesthetic inspire the use of more hand tools, or was it the other way around? My Hatcher guitar, by the way, seems to be going through a quite remarkable transfiguration. When I finally got the saddle replaced I had it set up with some extra light strings, thinking I needed that for bending the strings while playing blues, but after those changes the tone because far too beautiful to waste on the blues! I'm going to cultivate the classical end of my technique to play on the Woodsman - which is a good thing. I like John Hurt fine, but in the end I'd rather listen to Segovia. Cheers, Stan |
Here is a tool you need- I found one in a barn and could not get it working, so I passed it on to a very eager group of restorers
https://www.museumsmanitoba.com/150/...oid=1997105-01 Ed M |
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While I don't want to derail your thread, I did want to say that I owned a Jointmaker Pro for about a decade. I eventually sold it at considerably less than I paid for it and was happy to see it go. As a woodworker, guitar maker and design engineer, I found that while the "upside down saw" is a clever concept, it was incredibly badly implemented on a variety of fronts. I have owned a number of Bridge City Tool Company tools, many of which I've sold. My experience is that their designers really didn't understand how to make functional mechanisms - their tools that have no moving parts are very nice. For those interested in the Jointmaker Pro, Bridge City Tool Company was purchased a few years ago by the Chinese company Harvey. Since then the same Bridge City tools, including the Jointmaker Pro, are no longer made in the U.S., instead now made in China. The manufacturing quality appears to be no worse for having done so, but the retail prices of their tools have dropped by half or more. Lee Valley is again selling their tools, including the Jointmaker Pro. What is so surprising to me is that despite there being a lot of initial publicity about the Jointmaker Pro, those that have them virtually never talk about them. There are only a few - literally three or so - videos on the internet by owners. There is no mention of them on Internet forums. Hence, doing an internet search yields little result. One of the few ventures was by one of the well-known American woodworking schools who purchased a number of Jointmaker Pros. They then advertised a two-week (paid) seminar in how to use them and that the outcome of that seminar would be a book on all of the wonderful things that could be done with the Jointmaker Pro. The book was never published and nothing was ever heard from again regarding the Jointmaker at that school. Its an odd mystery that those who spent thousands of dollars on one never talk about them. This is the first time I've seen any owner actually talk about having one, save the few YouTube videos of people doing introductory stuff with it that a handsaw would do faster and easier and with as much accuracy. Even in the days before the company was purchased, and they had their own discussion forum, almost all of the discussion regarding the Jointmaker Pro was from people with setup and performance issues, not people showing all of the things they had done with it. |
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