BuddytheReow
Moderator
Well, sorta. I am going to build a guitar body. From scratch. Never done this before, so I figured I would document my journey here for anyone who's interested or would like to comment/give pointers.
A little introduction:
My first step into DIY was putting together a kit guitar about, oh, 5 years ago. That taught me a LOT about sanding, finishing, soldering, fretwork, etc. Of course, many mistakes were made along the process, but once complete I fell in love with working with my hands. Anyways, the kit build was functional, but the way the factory routed out the tremolo cavity made it really not playable due to horrible intonation. I mean, we're talking about a half step off once you got up to the highest fret! So, this turned into my chug machine for a while.
Fast forward to today and I've discovered a passion for woodworking and I think the time has come for me to try this out. Once I put the kit guitar together years ago it was always a pipedream to make a guitar 100% from scratch, or at least the wooden pieces: the body and the neck/fretboard.
What I'm going to do:
I'm going to take the finished neck from my kit build and make a guitar body out of a single 2x4. The 2x4 has been sitting in my garage for about a year, so I'm not worried about it warping. Any woodworker should know (either by trial and error or have been told) that construction grade lumber is incredibly moist when it's sitting on the shelf at your local home center and needs a significant amount of time to dry out. Otherwise you'll have lots of problems once the project is done for finer woodworking. The shape will be my own design, but of course I'll be inspired by what's currently out there. The power tools I will use/have are a table saw, miter saw, jigsaw, orbital sander, router, and hand drill. Some hardware I will cannibalize from the kit build, but not all.
I took the plunge over the weekend, but here was my starting point. My kit build and a single 2x4.
A little introduction:
My first step into DIY was putting together a kit guitar about, oh, 5 years ago. That taught me a LOT about sanding, finishing, soldering, fretwork, etc. Of course, many mistakes were made along the process, but once complete I fell in love with working with my hands. Anyways, the kit build was functional, but the way the factory routed out the tremolo cavity made it really not playable due to horrible intonation. I mean, we're talking about a half step off once you got up to the highest fret! So, this turned into my chug machine for a while.
Fast forward to today and I've discovered a passion for woodworking and I think the time has come for me to try this out. Once I put the kit guitar together years ago it was always a pipedream to make a guitar 100% from scratch, or at least the wooden pieces: the body and the neck/fretboard.
What I'm going to do:
I'm going to take the finished neck from my kit build and make a guitar body out of a single 2x4. The 2x4 has been sitting in my garage for about a year, so I'm not worried about it warping. Any woodworker should know (either by trial and error or have been told) that construction grade lumber is incredibly moist when it's sitting on the shelf at your local home center and needs a significant amount of time to dry out. Otherwise you'll have lots of problems once the project is done for finer woodworking. The shape will be my own design, but of course I'll be inspired by what's currently out there. The power tools I will use/have are a table saw, miter saw, jigsaw, orbital sander, router, and hand drill. Some hardware I will cannibalize from the kit build, but not all.
I took the plunge over the weekend, but here was my starting point. My kit build and a single 2x4.
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