Having finished the Georgian bureau restoration covered in a recent thread I have time and space for another project. It's another oldie, in that fifteen years ago I bought a couple of harp kits in a fit of enthusiasm, got part way and then moved countries, houses, got busy etc etc. It isn't doing any good sitting in the shed in pieces but at least the timber is nicely seasoned!
The kit is basically the wood components cut roughly to shape plus the strings, levers, tuning pins etc. All the detailed work and joinery is left to do, apart from the holes for the tuning pins and bridges, which are pre-drilled. The wood is nice hard maple, with each thickness made up of two laminated 20 mm thick pieces, a good method.
When I got the kit originally, I glued up the sound box part - just glued butt joints on the angled edges. The first job was cutting the mortice and tenon to join the neck (the top bit carrying the string tuners) and the pillar (the bit at the front. This carries a lot of stress (the string tension will be about 500 lb) so needs to fit well. Much harder to make an accurate joint with the tenon going off at an angle than I had realised! The morticed cut nicely on the morticed when levelled with the base of the machine.
Once this is done the frame of the harp can be dry assembled:
and it begins to look like a harp. The height is about 90 cm.
Is the rest of the WIP something that people would be interested in?
Keith
The kit is basically the wood components cut roughly to shape plus the strings, levers, tuning pins etc. All the detailed work and joinery is left to do, apart from the holes for the tuning pins and bridges, which are pre-drilled. The wood is nice hard maple, with each thickness made up of two laminated 20 mm thick pieces, a good method.
When I got the kit originally, I glued up the sound box part - just glued butt joints on the angled edges. The first job was cutting the mortice and tenon to join the neck (the top bit carrying the string tuners) and the pillar (the bit at the front. This carries a lot of stress (the string tension will be about 500 lb) so needs to fit well. Much harder to make an accurate joint with the tenon going off at an angle than I had realised! The morticed cut nicely on the morticed when levelled with the base of the machine.
Once this is done the frame of the harp can be dry assembled:
and it begins to look like a harp. The height is about 90 cm.
Is the rest of the WIP something that people would be interested in?
Keith