profchris
Established Member
By popular request (OK, one person asked ) I'm documenting a guitar as I build it.
This won't be a standard dreadnaught beast, but is vaguely inspired by the US parlor guitars of the 1930s. The methods I'm using don't require any specialist tools, and indeed you could build one of these using 1.5mm birch ply if you were prepared to paint it (don't stain and finish birch ply for instruments, it always looks tacky!).
I'm starting on the body, most of which is a recycled Victorian wardrobe door. I'm guessing this is Honduras mahogany, and sadly it's flat cut rather than vertical grain. I can make that work for the sides and the back, but the top is also mahogany and that really needs to be vertical grain. So I've bought some expensively educated Brazilian mahogany from a luthier friend.
Yesterday I took a slice of the door and resawed it lengthways to make the back. One half cupped a little overnight, so I've planed the two saw cut sides flat and joined them bookmatched.
The process is simple once I've got a light-free joint. I tape the plates together, planed sides downward, put a small batten underneath to make a tent, and tap panel pins along the sides.
Then run glue into the joint and simply press flat. The panel pins push the plates together with enough pressure to get a perfect joint (if I planed it perfectly to begin with!). To make sure the planed sides come out pretty level I clamp a batten either side of the join (making sure It's clear of the glue squeeze out which I've wiped away).
Then it was just a matter of planing down the top (already joined) and sides to about 2.2mm (top) and 1.8mm (sides), and cutting a sound hole in the top.
Here is the back, now joined but not yet planed. This is at about 8mm, so I've plenty of planing to do!
This won't be a standard dreadnaught beast, but is vaguely inspired by the US parlor guitars of the 1930s. The methods I'm using don't require any specialist tools, and indeed you could build one of these using 1.5mm birch ply if you were prepared to paint it (don't stain and finish birch ply for instruments, it always looks tacky!).
I'm starting on the body, most of which is a recycled Victorian wardrobe door. I'm guessing this is Honduras mahogany, and sadly it's flat cut rather than vertical grain. I can make that work for the sides and the back, but the top is also mahogany and that really needs to be vertical grain. So I've bought some expensively educated Brazilian mahogany from a luthier friend.
Yesterday I took a slice of the door and resawed it lengthways to make the back. One half cupped a little overnight, so I've planed the two saw cut sides flat and joined them bookmatched.
The process is simple once I've got a light-free joint. I tape the plates together, planed sides downward, put a small batten underneath to make a tent, and tap panel pins along the sides.
Then run glue into the joint and simply press flat. The panel pins push the plates together with enough pressure to get a perfect joint (if I planed it perfectly to begin with!). To make sure the planed sides come out pretty level I clamp a batten either side of the join (making sure It's clear of the glue squeeze out which I've wiped away).
Then it was just a matter of planing down the top (already joined) and sides to about 2.2mm (top) and 1.8mm (sides), and cutting a sound hole in the top.
Here is the back, now joined but not yet planed. This is at about 8mm, so I've plenty of planing to do!