#1
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Soundboard crack, home repair that is least going to be an issue long term
Hi, I bought a discounted, soundboard needs repair due to a crack acoustic, pic of the crack is here https://imgur.com/a/8REZQJI
It is going to be a beater guitar, outside a lot, so what I want to do is a home repair and play it a while but not mess it up if I want to fix it nice later on. I was thinking I could shape a thin narrow brace and glue it along behind the crack and therefore not change the top appearance at all but give it no chance to get worse due to beach humidity or heat or whatever. Then at at least if someone good wants to redo the top, I have not messed it up. Is that a good strategy? Thanks! |
#2
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By appearance, I say that is a finish-only crack, not a crack through the wood.
The finish needs a minor touch-up. Get a bottle of ultra low viscosity CA glue, it will wick into the crack s very nicley. Look up a video from StewMac on drop filling finish chips with CA glue to see the technique. You can do this pretty nicely for the cost of a bottle of glue a couple razor blades and several sheets of polishing sandpaper and then polishing compound (get these at your auto parts store). list of materials - single edge razor blades ($5) - scotch tape ($2) - 1000, 3000, 5000 sandpaper (preferably flexible) ($20) - macguires polish and swirl remover ($10) - drill polishing/buffing kit from Harbor freight ($10)
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Fazool "The wand chooses the wizard, Mr. Potter" Taylor GC7, GA3-12, SB2-C, SB2-Cp...... Ibanez AVC-11MHx , AC-240 |
#3
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Quote:
Thanks again, might give it a go but I have read that a bad repair is near impossible to turn into a good repair by an actual craftsman later. |