bugbear
Established Member
I have been followed home from a car boot sale by a classical guitar - an Almeria BM. I bought it on the strength of an undamaged, solid wood (not ply) body. These appear to cost around £100-£140 new.
On detailed inspection I note several issues.
Repairs
I am more worried about the bridge/saddle. If the use of steel strings has torn the bridge off, or raised it, I'm in trouble.
Here's the top view of the lack-of-saddle
Here's the gap, and glue, under the rear edge of the bridge
Oddly, the front edge of the bridge sits perfectly neat and flush.
So - (since I know there are some luthiers amongst us) - is this repairable, and is it worth repairing?
Hints, tips, techniques and advice welcomed.
BugBear
On detailed inspection I note several issues.
- It was strung with steel strings, where I understand nylon would be correct for this model.
- It had no saddle, the bridge may be broken or altered during the removal
- the saddle may have been removed to lower the action, which I measured at 5/32" at the octave fret (with no saddle)
- on two of the tuners, the knobs have broken off
- the saddle may have been reglued badly
Repairs
- I can readily replace the strings (old strings would need replacing anyway)
- I can buy and fit a saddle (blanks are cheap)
- I have measured the tuner post spacing, and it seems to be the standard [thanks google] 35mm; replacement tuners
sets are around a tenner.
I am more worried about the bridge/saddle. If the use of steel strings has torn the bridge off, or raised it, I'm in trouble.
Here's the top view of the lack-of-saddle
Here's the gap, and glue, under the rear edge of the bridge
Oddly, the front edge of the bridge sits perfectly neat and flush.
So - (since I know there are some luthiers amongst us) - is this repairable, and is it worth repairing?
Hints, tips, techniques and advice welcomed.
BugBear