Saturday, June 13, 2009
The latest guitar is all put together. The new, improved way of neck attachment and bridge attachment allows the guitar to be fully assembled and played and adjusted, making the guitar complete and finished in each and every way except the Finish. I'll say hear (Yes, I know the spelling is incorrect in this context) and now this guitar sounds and plays fabulously!!!! It is the easiest guitar for me to play ever. And the resonance seemingly goes on forever. All in all, its VERY COOL!!!! I will not be doing anything more on guitars, or anything else for that matter except for anything related to selling the church we are living in. After 3 real estate agents, all with empty, meaningless promises, the only way to get the job done is to do it myself. $30,000 commission is apparently not enough for an agent to put forth any effort at all. I hate being in sales. I am bored with the whole process. That of course is why I attempted to hire it done, but the blog from now on until sold will not be about cool guitars.
Sunday, June 7, 2009
How often do you blow your nut? No, not that! Blowing ones nut is when after so carefully filing the grooves for the strings on the bone nut, that is filing each string groove with a special rounded file that fit the string exactly, that just before its done, at the almost there, but just a little more stage you stroke the file one two many times. One stroke (no, not that kind of stroke) is all it takes to go too far and now the string sits too low and buzzes when played. All that's left to do at that point is throw the damned nut away and start over. Blowing the nut is commonplace for me, and is frustrating. One would think I would eventually get competent at the seemingly simple job of filing a nut, but so far I get in much practice. Someone once said "He who works with his hands is a laborer, He who works with his hands and his mind is a craftsman, and He who works with his hands, his mind and his soul is an artist".
Friday, June 5, 2009
This is a multi-inovative music machine. The neck is adjustable in the plane necessary to change the string action(the playability if you will). That part works marvelously. The top is fashioned from Douglas Fir. Yes the stuff that grows everywhere around here. A really cool tone wood as I've just discovered(see the strings on the guitar). The top is cut away much like an electric guitar so the strings above the joint at the body are more reachable. And the top is braced with a fan system instead of the old, but still good "X" system. Due to the neck system, the guitar can and is put all together before finishing, and before any finishing touches such as the cool looking wood around the soundholes. This ability to assemble, and play and critique is way cool, because everything changes the sound, everything. The real question now remains. Do I cut out more of the top? I would cut out a comma, right where the arm rests across the guitar, and Iwould cut out the side a bit there as well, giving the arm a relaxed fit on the guitar while playing, and of course, looking cool. But the tone will be changed, probably a lot. So is the xperiment worth doing, or should it wait for another guitar? Perhaps tomorrow will tell, perhaps not.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)