Doing Things Wrong

Took Some Time Off

The Mosrite body

I took some time off from luthering, but yesterday I got the urge again. I took down this body and gave it a polishing with my new buffing rig. On the back I was a little too aggressive sanding out the over-spray in some spots, but the front looks like this.

This is the buffing rig again, you can find details in the workshop.

This body has been through hell, so I'm not being too particular. The front has one small divot that I filled with lacquer and will polish out. The back has a few small thin spots in the finish, but nothing through. This is oil-based polyurethane.

The "hell" was my first and last experiment with water-based "polyurethane" ( polyurethane in quotes because water-based really isn't polyurethane, it's more like clear house paint. ) I ended up sanding all of that crap off for a total do-over, including the binding. As a result, the front and back are a little wavy with the grain, but from a few feet away it looks fine. You can read volumes of water-based propaganda online. Don't believe it. Hardly anyone online actually knows what they are talking about, especially the "experts".

The polishing rig works better than I ever hoped. I have two wheels, a coarse starter wheel and a fine finishing wheel, in the picture. They are actually the same, the only difference is the compound. The DeWalt grinder runs slow enough to do the job with very little heating, and it is much faster and cleaner than wet-polishing. Next time I am going to try taking out the over-spray with the coarse wheel rather than sanding it. The best thing about this setup is that it packs away in a toolbox when I'm not using it.


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I took a drive over to Harbor Freight - purveyor of fine {sarcasm} Chinese tools & hardware - and picked up this little drill press. With a coupon, it cost me just over fifty bucks. This is not what I would call a good drill press, in fact, it is pretty crappy. The base and the table are stamped, not forged, and small. The quill travel is a measly two inches, parts that should be steel are aluminum, parts that should be aluminum are plastic, vibration is excessive, and the 3/8" chuck has a disconcerting wobble to it. I knew all that when I bought it, and I never would have if I did not already have a much better one, or at least a decent one. What I wanted from this drill press is small size and lightweight, so I can add it to my inside workstation, and not have to leave the heat/ac to go drill a hole in the garage. This press weighs well under 40 pounds and doesn't take up too much space on my inside workbench. My 'good' drill press is not something you'd want to move around a lot.

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