Doing Things Wrong

Plans

I've been thinking about what I want to do luthiery-wise from here on out, and I think that apart from the cool Radiata glue-ups, I am going to do mainly plywood-core Danelectro-style bodies with Tolex side bindings. I want to avoid bothersome complications like three-dimensional paint jobs. If it's not enjoyable, then why bother?

What I am not going to do is pay top dollar for slabs of firewood. I'm not even very interested in lumberyard poplar anymore. I keep my eyes peeled for dumpster tonewood, and I would love to get another free teak cutting board. Teak is hard enough to leave with an oiled finish.

I have worked out lots of nice options for fronts, from fancy veneers to solid colors and bursts. For the backs -- who really cares about the back? -- hammered spray paint works very nicely. I may experiment with some of the crinkle paints that are available as well. For backs, I want to find finishes that are simple, easy, inexpensive, and not ruined by their first encounter with a belt buckle.

Both the UV-poly and the water-based 'poly' proved to be complete failures, although the UV may have uses for other things. Enough experimenting with finishes, I am going back to oil-based polyurethane exclusively. I also want to try more with non-sprayed finishes. However, as far as I am concerned, oiled wood is not a finish.

For necks, I have found that Radiata pine from the hardware store makes an excellent lightweight neck. I have a good supply of fancy birds-eye maple, and a supply of walnut for fretboards, as well as several other pieces, and maple and oak whenever I want it from Home Depot and Lowes. I am in the process of finding out if Radiata can be used for a fretboard.

For scale length, I am standardizing on 32" for bass, unless I do something for which a different scale is intrinsic. I may try some "micro" scales.

I think my experiments with CA and glitter inlays are very promising, and I will continue that. Right now I have three different inlay patterns for a 32" scale, but Home Depot just gave me an enormous piece of acrylic template material, so I can make many more. I also have a wide range of different 1/4" dots. It might also be interesting to make inlays in bodies.

I have worked out a very simple truss rod design that uses a spoke nut and is even reversible, making it effectively double-acting. I am not against using good inexpensive double-acting rods from eBay, and now even StewMac. For guitars, I will continue my practice of fixed steel tube truss rods. I will continue with bolt-on necks exclusively.

I will continue my experiments with cheap piezos and homemade buffers. I have a good stock of lipstick pickups, a few Strat-sized humbuckers, and some others. I want to start building simple onboard effects, I have a couple of fuzz designs that I could try right now.

I have a good supply of standard pickguard materials, and I just got a big free sheet of thin acrylic.

I still have a lot of kooky ideas, and I get more all the time. What I am not interested in is building the same old thing the same old way that is done better and cheaper in factories around the world, or spending a fortune on overpriced 'luthiery' parts and materials.

Just wait until I finish my $50 Rickenbacker clone.


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If you've read this whole site, you've probably picked up on my love of Danelectro guitars. Inexpensively produced for the masses, Danelectros are much better guitars than they have any right to be. Lipstick pickups, masonite bodies, innovative construction, great styling, tone, and playability, at bargain-basement prices. I just love Danelectros, both the old and the new.

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