profchris
Established Member
Carving the neck shaft is the easiest part. For the profile I like I simply divide the neck into thirds, across its width and depth, and then remove the outer section using drawknife and rasp. Any tool you are comfortable with - spokeshave, chisel, pocket knife, works.
Then knock off the corners, and work the neck until you have a profile which feels nice in the hand. Blend in the heel, shape the headstock and blend that in too.
A useful trick is to take a strip of coarse sandpaper about two feet long, clamp the headstock to the workbench so the neck sticks out, and then use it like a shoe-shine boy. Yes you're sanding across the grain, but this gives a really nice curve to the back of the neck.
All this rough carving is pretty quick work - less than an hour in total. But then I attach the fretboard and take the sides of the neck back to meet it precisely (I've found that trying to make the neck to the right size usually means I'm slightly wobbly somewhere, and so the fretboard needs adjusting to fit. Of course, the truss rod goes in at this stage, held at either end with a little silicone sealant to make sure it doesn't rattle.
After that I spend at least another hour refining the shape, pretending I'm playing the guitar and feeling where it's not quite right.
Here is pretty much the final result, all the curves blending smoothly into each other. The toolkit is all there - rasp, half round engineer's file, cabinet scraper, and sandpaper with half a wine cork as the block.
Next up - drill for the tuners and fret the neck.
Then knock off the corners, and work the neck until you have a profile which feels nice in the hand. Blend in the heel, shape the headstock and blend that in too.
A useful trick is to take a strip of coarse sandpaper about two feet long, clamp the headstock to the workbench so the neck sticks out, and then use it like a shoe-shine boy. Yes you're sanding across the grain, but this gives a really nice curve to the back of the neck.
All this rough carving is pretty quick work - less than an hour in total. But then I attach the fretboard and take the sides of the neck back to meet it precisely (I've found that trying to make the neck to the right size usually means I'm slightly wobbly somewhere, and so the fretboard needs adjusting to fit. Of course, the truss rod goes in at this stage, held at either end with a little silicone sealant to make sure it doesn't rattle.
After that I spend at least another hour refining the shape, pretending I'm playing the guitar and feeling where it's not quite right.
Here is pretty much the final result, all the curves blending smoothly into each other. The toolkit is all there - rasp, half round engineer's file, cabinet scraper, and sandpaper with half a wine cork as the block.
Next up - drill for the tuners and fret the neck.