Doing Things Wrong

Headless Brainstorm

This is the headless bridge I got a while ago that proved to be cosmetically damaged. You can even see the damage in this picture. I filled in the dings with black CA, but I had no expectation of ever hiding it, so this bridge got thrown in the junk box after I got a refund, they didn't want it back.

I just got a great idea to salvage this part: Hammered Paint. I already have a can of black. I can disassemble the bridge again, mask off the saddle area, and sand and shoot the damaged exterior. The texture of the hammered paint should hide the dings perfectly, and the paint itself dries hard and tough, as good as the original finish.

So I'll be able to use this part after all. I still feel I was justified in getting a refund, as I was not about to build a project around a damaged part. It's lucky I didn't throw it away. Now what sort of demented thing should I do ... ? Instead of a Steinberger, I could build a ... cheeseburger ! No, that would be silly.

I haven't used this in a while, but I think it is called-for here
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In fact, I think I deserve two !!!

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I took this 'Bird down from it's usual place up on the wall to take some measurements, and I noticed that it had grown fangs along the ( otherwise excellent Mighty-Mite ) neck that were not there before. Sharp fret ends is something I see people piss and moan about all the time. It is going to happen. It's not that the frets weren't dressed properly at the factory, the problem is that most guitars are made in warm humid places like China, Mexico, Indonesia, and Tennessee in the summer. Wood swells with moisture. When they are brought to the USA and placed in a dry heated winter house, the wood dries and shrinks a tiny bit, and the fret ends protrude. Everything about fretwork is a matter of thousandths of an inch, even the tiniest discrepancies are obvious. So this is not a defect, it is something that is simply going to happen, and it is easy to fix.