#31
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I’m very sorry to hear of your brother’s passing webdesigner. You have every reason to have the best repair possible done on your guitar. In a way I feel you would be honoring your late brother’s memory. It will obviously be with you for the long haul so the monetary issue really shouldn’t play into your decision.
I agree with letting Larrivee know the history of the guitar, if you haven’t already. I’ve repaired some shotguns with similar family histories. Not that they wouldn’t always do their best work, but it gives the repairer another reason to shoot for perfection or a close as possible. Being aware of the emotional value of the piece gives the craftsman another level of satisfaction in the finished job.
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Guitars: too many or too few...depends who you ask |
#32
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I sent him an email. He got back to me and wrote he is unable to take on any new work due to his exceptionally long repair queue.
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Martin HD28 |
#33
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I guess the important point is that your repairer isn't planning a repair which might make cosmetic repair possible. If he knows you might want further work done later, when you find the right person and can afford it, that should be fine. |
#34
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So sorry to hear about the passing of your brother. Given the importance of this guitar, I think it needs the best possible repair job. If you're in New York, you should consider TJ Thompson. He probably has an interminable repair cue as well, but I've heard great things about his workmanship.
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#35
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There are few who can do this job and make it look like it never happened and they rightfully charge a premium. I've been doing this work for 25 years now and I still cannot get something like that perfect. Having the missing pieces helps a lot though. If they fit together well then hide glue would be an optimal choice then fill and finish with Glue-Boost and polish it out. I also would not use a cleat on a repair like this but rather a backing made of very thin mahogany 'tape'. But anything like that could be removed in the future. You just have to reach in there with a finger plane and scraper and remove it.
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#36
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I'm very sorry for the loss of your brother to this terrible virus. I hope that you're able to get it sufficiently repaired, even if it's not perfect.
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"It's only castles burning." - Neil Young |
#37
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#38
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If it were my guitar I would DIY it. If you've ever fixed a hole in drywall it would be basically the same procedure. Glue a backing plate in the interior behind the hole and then fill the hole with your choice of filler material. It won't look like new but it will still function as well as it always did and the cost will be zero. It's just a guitar, there are millions of others and they are making more all the time.
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#39
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I think if OP felt comfortable making a DIY repair we'd never have seen the question. My take is that OP wants the damage to disappear. And learning a difficult skill by practicing on an heirloom - - - I wouldn't do it.
(Anybody ever seen that Disney cartoon 'The Sorcerer's Apprentice'?) |
#40
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Larrivee OO-05, OOV-03, OO-44R & Strat Last edited by jpmist; 09-20-2022 at 07:14 AM. |
#41
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#42
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The cleat has been installed and clamped. The Luthier is going to leave it in for the weekend.
https://imgur.com/gallery/vZvZqxc
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Martin HD28 |
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Tags |
acoustic, crack, larrivee, repair |
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