bugbear
Established Member
I was watching a factory video, on the making of the famous Hofner Violin bass.
http://www.hofner.com/violin_bass_history
What I found fascinating was that the operations are either jig or template guided machines
or extreme cases of the workmanship of risk. Nothing in between.
The neck is initially cut on a large
4 gang copy lathe, but is later shown being worked by a craftsman with a knife.
Not a rasp, no a spokeshave, not even a drawknife. A knife, like whittling stick in the forest.
The fret cutting is similarly risky.
It's an interesting way to pass 17 minutes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xADoIFoKa0Q
BugBear
http://www.hofner.com/violin_bass_history
What I found fascinating was that the operations are either jig or template guided machines
or extreme cases of the workmanship of risk. Nothing in between.
The neck is initially cut on a large
4 gang copy lathe, but is later shown being worked by a craftsman with a knife.
Not a rasp, no a spokeshave, not even a drawknife. A knife, like whittling stick in the forest.
The fret cutting is similarly risky.
It's an interesting way to pass 17 minutes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xADoIFoKa0Q
BugBear