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Building Manual
MK16EN_V102.0
1
Introduction
Thank you for the condence that you have put in my products!
This is a kit for building a 16 hollow archtop guitar. It looks quite tradi/onal, but
there are some details that make it unusual and some among them make it easier
to build than conven/onal archtop guitars:
The neck uses a tenon-mor/se instead of a dovetail. Thus, it does not have a separate extension as most archtop guitars have. The tenon itself is unusual too: unlike
most joints of its kind (perhaps all), this one does not need 1ng at its le side.
The inner surface of the top has been simplied right below the braces. That allows
me to supply carved braces that t perfectly without having to spend a lot of /me
working on their underside.
The tailpiece is a0ached to the tail block through a bolt that locks into a metal
piece embedded in the tailpiece. This eliminates the need for a tailpiece bracket.
The volume poten/ometer is disguised under the ngerboard. This is made easier
using a special ebony piece that is glued to the ngerboard and to which the pot,
in turn, is glued
The fret ends are not visible, as the fretboard has two binding strips made from
the same material as the fretboard itself.
The pickup ring is ebony; it ts the top perfectly and at the right angle. This is something hard to nd even in top-class instruments.
Most parts are made using CNC technology. All the wooden pieces except the kerfed linings have been manufactured in my workshop in Spain. Metal parts and
electronic components are all top quality, some being imported manufactured products.
Please note that this kit may be slightly dierent from what is explained in these
instruc/ons. Also no/ce that this is not a complete kit; below, youll nd a list of
addi/onal materials that you will need for its comple/on.
Although the materials in this kit are all high quality, we cannot guarantee that
the resul/ng instrument is, as skill levels vary. If you have already worked with
wood and take your /me following these instruc/ons precisely, youll end up with a
quality instrument that youll be proud of. Good luck!
Introduction
Introduction
You will nd these parts in most lutherie suppliers; there is a very complete
list at h6p://buildyourguitar.com/resources/suppliers.htm
If you nd some error in the content of the package, or if you need some
spares, please contact me at contact@archtopguitarkits.com.
Ques5ons...?
www.archtopguitarkits.com/Kits/FAQ16_EN.html
Introduction
Control the rela5ve humidity at your workplace, which must be between 40 and 50%.
Dont do anything without having read carefully the instruc5ons in advance. Try to complement it with the sec5ons in the books that are referenced at the end of this manual. Previous experience with at top
or even solid guitar kits is great.
Keep your edge tools well sharpened.
Some power tools are very dangerous if used improperly, but the
same can be said of many manual tools. Read, understand and follow
all the safety advices included with both.
Wood dust can be a health and re hazard. Always wear a mask, especially when sanding wood, and use extrac5on equipment.
Molds are used extensively by guitar makers everywhere. They are used to eec5vely support the
sides in the right posi5on during the rst stages of the building process.
When I decided to make this kit, my rst worry was how to avoid the maker the pain of making a
mold. A&er giving it a lot of thought, I didnt nd how an inexperienced maker could build a guitar
like this without using one. Experienced makers could do it somehow, spot bending the dicult to
bend curly woods and working with a lot of care, but even they avoid what some call free building. Yes, now you know: you will have to make a mold. However, it has some details that make it
quite simple and easy to make, without compromising its func5onality or toughness. I have tried my
best to make it one of the best molds that you can nd, with details such as the magnets that will
surely be adopted by other makers in the future. And, last but not least, its construc5on may be as
much fun as the construc5on of the guitar itself.
Procedure
The thickness of this guitar at the sides is around 66-68 mm. Without the top and back glued, the sides and blocks (neck, tail) will
be around 10 mm less due to them having a thickness of around 5
mm each. Thus, the sides will be 56-58 mm tall. The mold must be
thinner than that, so that it can be used to glue the back (and
even the top, as we will see) to the sides while these are placed inside it. However, it must not be too thin, as it wouldnt support
very well the sides and it wouldnt work well for clamping the
blocks while they are being glued to the sides. With all this in
mind, we will make the mold around 50 mm thick. Fortunately,
there are standard thickness of MDF (Medium Density Fiberboard)
stock that coincide more or less in most countries, and permit to
arrive there easily: use one (or 19 mm) and two 5/8 (or 16
mm) MDF lamina5ons. If you dont nd those thicknesses, you can
use some other combina5on, even using the template itself, but
the following instruc5ons describe three-layered molds. Everything will be ne if the total thickness is somewhere between 50
and 54 mm.
Standard MDF stock is a material that swells a lot when we6ed. If
you use it, you will have to protect it somehow. I suggest that you
use polyurethane varnish, as described later. You can use moisture
resistant MDF instead, but it is not as readily available as standard
MDF.
Before you start making the mold I would like to men5on that
there exist the open and closed varie5es. Open molds are formed
by two halves that are a6ached by toggle latches or a similar mechanism, and allow easy removal of complete glued soundboxes
(top, back and sides), if this construc5on method was used. Closed
molds cannot be disassembled and are used to glue the back (or
top) to the sides, but closing the soundbox using the mold is not
recommended, as there is no guarantee that the guitar can be extracted without suering damage. The mold described here is a
third kind, midway between both types. It can be opened at the
tail, but not at the neck end.
10
Separate the two parts of the template cu7ng the tabs and smoothing them with a chisel and sandpaper. Work with the outside
part, which is the real template; the inside will be used later.
A6ach the template to one of the thin (5/8 or 16 mm) MDF boards, using a few clamps. Drill the six holes in the stock as in the
template using a 5/16 (or 8 mm) pilot point drill bit; try to keep it
perfectly upright (use a drill press if possible).
Using the dowel pins instead of the clamps, trace the outline of
the template on the board.
Remove the clamps and cut it with the jig saw, following the pencil
lines, inside and outside, and leaving a li6le to be trimmed by the
router later.
Do the same for the other two boards. Eventually you will have
the three lamina5ons and the template. Dont discard the three
central sec5ons.
accurate shape. For the rst method (rst and second pictures),
join the three lamina5ons, using the 8 mm dowels supplied with
the kit and, on top, the supplied template. Dont use glue yet.
Now use the router with the pa6ern bit to copy the template to
the mold lamina5on above.
I have used clamps and a heavy chunk of wood to x the lamina5ons to the table. The idea here is to use the template rst and
then remove it, using each routed lamina5on as a template for the
one below it. This is a simple method, but you will have dicul5es
trying to keep the router straight, because the narrow mold walls
are not a steady base for it.
The second method xes that problem with the stability of the
router. It involves the use of a rou5ng table where the router is
placed upside down, in this case with a Flush Trim Bit instead of a
Pa6ern Bit. I consider that a rou5ng table is not dicult to make;
you may even nd commercial units that can be adapted to a
great variety of routers. If you plan to rout a binding channel for
your guitar with a minimum guarantee of success, a rou5ng table
is the easiest way to go. By the way, I was only posing for the
photo. Otherwise, my hands would be farther away from the bit!
Rou5ng tables are not available to everybody, so there is another
alterna5ve: use the central part of the template. Screw it to one or
more of the central pieces that you sawed from the boards and
you will have a wider base for rou5ng the outside curve.
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12
Rou5ng the inside will not be possible unless you make the central
base smaller, leaving enough room for the router bit.
Whatever the method, you may cut more than one lamina5on if
the bit length permits it; if not, you may need to remove the template and use the area that has been cut on the lamina5on above
as the new template, placing and removing lamina5ons similarly
for the central support if you use it. This is only a guide, and what
you do depends a lot on the bit dimensions and other factors.
Now that you have cut the three lamina5ons, get the middle lamina5on and, using a chisel, cut four recesses at the points shown.
These must allow the placement of the magnets supplied with the
kit. Their external surface must be as close as possible to the inner
surface of the mold, but not protrude above it. Warning: these
magnets are excep/onally strong and can be dangerous if your
skin is caught between them. Wear gloves and work with one
magnet at a /me, keeping the others at a safe distance. Read the
important safety rules at the end of this manual!
13
14
Magnets??
The waist spreader in most molds is based on
a turnbuckle screw that pushes upon the
waist. While it is not dicult to make, you will
need to cut two addi5onal blocks that act as
intermediary between the screw and the
waist. There are other designs; the one shown
here, used by some makers, is elegant and
simple.
However, neither of these designs will allow
you to close the soundbox with the waist spreader inside, at least in guitars with limited access (f-holes instead of round hole, for
example). I considered that a necessity for a
guitar built by someone who cannot retouch
the sides in a bending iron. These magnets
may not be as powerful as turnbuckle screws,
but wait 5ll you see them in ac5on!
Now glue the three lamina5ons together; use wood glue (I used
Titebond), spread it well with a brush, use the dowel pins to keep
the three lamina5ons aligned except the pin at the tail end and, nally, clamp everything.
Be careful when gluing the lamina5ons, as they may slip, losing
their alignment. To avoid that, do it in two or three steps, using
gradually more clamping force. Try not to use a lot of glue to avoid
ooze-out, especially around the recesses for the magnets. If you
look at the photo youll see a lot of clamps; you can do this with
less, but my recommenda5on is that you have at least 15 youll
need them later.
When the glue is dry, remove the clamps and check the ver5cality
of the inner walls. This is very important at the neckblok area! Correct them with a cabinet scraper, also removing the dried glue
from inside and outside.
Use a saw and a small chisel to shape the area at which the router
bit couldnt arrive, opening a small recess for the cutaway side.
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16
All the magnets in the mold must show the same polarity outside,
N for example. Get four magnets and, working one by one, sand
their S surfaces (P120) un5l they are rough. Use a good epoxy to
glue them in the mold cavi5es, S face down. Use a plas5c straight
edge to verify that they are ush with the inner surface of the
mold.
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18
Drill a 5/16 (8 mm) hole at the tail end for the M8 bolt (#42). Be
careful to make it straight, especially if you need to drill from both
sides.
Trace the center line at the neck end. Use the hole for the dowel
pin as a reference, as it is located at the center line of the instrument. Mark it permanently making shallow cuts with a ne saw.
Similarly, draw the center line at the tail end, but this 5me cut the
mold along it.
Now the mold can be opened at the tail end. It is 5me to glue the
last 5/16 (8 mm) dowel pin in its hole. Apply glue to a half of it
only, so that it is glued to one of the sides of the mold. Avoid contact with the other side using a piece of waxed paper or similar.
With the dowel pin glued, youll no5ce that both halves dont
close completely. There is a narrow gap le& by the saw, which you
must close now. Glue the correct thickness of cardboard or wood
to one of the sides, again using waxed paper to avoid it gluing to
the other side.
A&er the glue is dry, trim the glued pieces and retouch with polyurethane varnish. Finally, install the M8 long bolt with its washers
to close the mold.
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20
Now that you have nished the mold, put the sides in it, using a
few spring clamps and the magnets. If your clamps do not have
so& jaws, use small wood pieces in between.
You can leave the sides in the mold for a long 5me, but they
should stay clamped to avoid distor5ons. No5ce that, as the tail
area is not trimmed yet, it cannot be clamped adequately: I recommend you to follow the order of opera5ons in this manual
and start working on the sides now.
USING THE MOLD TO FINE-BEND THE SIDES
If you nd that the sides don't t well inside the mold, leaving more
than 1/8" at some places, wet them well inside and out. Clamp them
to the mold using as many spring clamps and wood intermediaries as
you need to get a good t without distor5ons or cupping. The wet
wood is very so& and can get impressions quite easily, so try to use
some so& material between the intermediaries and the sides. Once
dry (typically one day), work on them soon or you'll have to repeat the
procedure again.
Wet sides can damage the mold, and that's the reason why it must be
varnished. But the mold can cause damage to the sides too, the main
reason being the magnets having lost their chrome pla5ng due to collisions with other magnets. The oxide in the magnet will contaminate
the sides and you will get a nasty black spot. If you see that the surface
of the magnets is chipped, cover them with tape whenever you place
wet sides in the mold.
The sides, as supplied, are already bent. It is not easy for a supplier to do that, because bending
curly woods is far from being a simple procedure, especially at the cutaway area. In fact, it can get
so frustra5ng that I am sure that this is one of the aspects that any archtop guitar maker with previous experience will value most for this kit.
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22
Procedure
The rst thing that you will need to do is nd a good at working
table. Place the sides inside the mold, at on the table, and clamp
them using the magnets and some spring clamps.
Watch the gap between them at the neck area. Contrary to the tail
block, this doesn't need to be very narrow, but you can trim it anyway following the procedure shown in the pictures, using a machinist square and a block plane. You'll avoid tearing out the wood
(end grain is frail) if you start from both ends.
Note: A&er making the guitar for this kit I discovered that the neck
heel was not tall enough to cover the en5re joint between the sides at
the neckblock, unless a very thick heel cap was used. If you look at the
neck in your kit, it has a taller heel to avoid this problem.
Addi5onally, I don't want to give you a heel cap that is much thicker
than what is necessary, so, if you don't plan to bind the back, don't
make a lap joint as shown at right, because the neck cap won't cover
the end grain of the cutaway side completely. For unbound backs, use
a miter joint.
[See also page 94]
The block plane is not included in the list of tools; you may use
les, sandpaper, etc.
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24
The neckblock can be glued without much prepara5on using Titebond. You will need to sand or scrape the gluing surface at the
sides, with the purpose of cleaning the quite possibly dirty maple.
Do a dry run rst!
The blocks and the sides are both made from stock 58 mm high. However,
we7ng and hea5ng the wood for bending may modify its dimensions. Addi5onally, there will be some tolerances that you'll surely nd a&er you glue the
blocks. This is why the nal thickness of the guitar at the sides may range between 56 and 58 mm.
While the glue sets, you can nd the points at both sides where
they will meet at the tail end. Use spring clamps to adapt one of
the sides to the mold without leaving gaps, and then mark the
center point. Do the same for the other side.
Draw a line at the marks found, using a machinist square. Cut the
excess with a saw and rene it with a block plane (if not available,
use a le or sandpaper).
With the mold and sides rmly on the table, check that the joint is
at the center of the instrument and that the gap is not wider at
one of its ends, correc5ng the joint with the block plane if necessary.
With the basic joint already done, you'll have to rene it in order
to make the gap as small as possible. Use sandpaper, a small hard
sanding block and a lamp behind the joint: you must not see any
light through it.
Put them inside the mold using some wax paper in between. Sand
the gluing surface because, as before, the sides may be dirty.
Find the center of the tailblock and mark it with a pencil. When
you glue the block to the sides (using Titebond), keep everything
at on the table and the center marks aligned. Do a dry run rst!
No/ce that your tailblock may look dierent from the one shown here. With
the new design, you may use addi/onal clamps (arrows):
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26
A&er sanding the inside of the sides (P120, P180 and P220), you'll
install the kerfed linings. There are four lengths of this material in
the kit, enough for the en5re guitar and some le&over just in case.
Some guitars have uninterrupted linings from neckblock to tailblock. While this saves 5me at the factory, it is not an acceptable
method. Without the side reinforcement strips, the sides would
probably rip open a&er a moderate blow, ruining them. If the
strips are there, but they don't cover all the width of the sides, the
danger is s5ll present, so the best solu5on is to interrupt the lining
strips with the side reinforcement strips.
Begin cu7ng 16 lengths of 17 teeth. The rest will be approximately two lengths of 23 and two more of 20 (see diagram), but this
may vary, so wait un5l you have glued all the 17-teeth lengths.
With the supplied kerfed lining, each 17-teeth piece will be around
113 mm.
Glue the linings (Titebond), clamping them with the spring clamps.
They should be a hair above the sides. As always, remove the glue
ooze out.
When you glue the lining at the other side, use the strip as an
alignment. As before, don't glue the reinforcement strips yet.
At areas with high curvature, (waist and cutaway), you will have to
saw the kerngs almost all the way down before gluing. Otherwise, they will break.
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28
Glue and clamp each strip (use Titebond). Do it with the sides in
the mold, so that the spring clamps exert enough pressure to
adapt the at strips to the curved sides.
You must make a tool for sanding the excess height at the linings
and blocks. It is a long piece of wood with sanding paper (P60 or
P80), glued (I use double-sided tape) at one of its ends, as shown.
You can improve it easily using hook-and-loop fastening.
If you trace a line along the sides, you will know when to stop sanding.
It is not necessary that you use clamps, just the magnets. When
you are sanding at a certain area, press the side against the mold
with your free hand; that will be enough.
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A&er some detail sanding, this is the way the sides look inside the
mold right before gluing the top and back:
Tops are usually made of so&wood. This makes carving them quite easy, especially when comparing
the curly maple used for the backs. However, they are trickier to make: they have pickup and fholes, braces and more complex thickness gradua5ons. I have tried to simplify these tasks: the
holes are open and the braces are extremely easy to t.
The braces deserve some more comments. The rst version of this kit had "integral" braces (carved
in the top). As the strength of a brace is highest when the grain runs straight along it, they were perfectly parallel. However, most makers think that braces must form an angle with the direc5on of the
grain at the top; otherwise, there is an increased danger of spli7ng the top along their corners. Unfortunately, this rules out the integral braces. What I have done is to simplify the inner surface of
the top right below the braces, making it the same height at both sides of the brace. That way, I can
make them using a template, and they will t perfectly without any further adjustment.
Despite these simplica5ons, you'll s5ll have to graduate the top, but most of it will be done a&er
the soundbox is closed (see Step 7, Binding and Tuning the Soundbox).
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The best tool for carving tops and backs is a plane with its sole
curved (le&).
These are mainly sold for violin builders, and are available from
many lutherie suppliers. You will nd them in many sizes, but the
larger planes (palm planes, le& in the picture) are unnecessary because both top and back have been rough carved already. I prefer
to use a smaller nger plane (the one to the right in the picture)
with a blade width of 12 mm.
As an alterna5ve to the method described, you may use a thickness caliper for measuring the thickness of tops and backs (right).
You will need the following supplies:
Top, #1
Precut braces, two pieces, #2
Side reinforcement strip material (for the pickup hole), #8
Glue (Titebond)
Sandpaper (P80,P120,P180 andP220)
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34
Procedure
Before doing anything, take your 5me studying the top. No5ce the
following:
The machine carving has been done with a square bit. This
means that you will no5ce some stair stepping especially
where the slope of the surface is higher.
The top has been cut approximately 1/8 (3 mm) bigger than
necessary, all around.
As supplied, the top has three dierent regions. The central
region has a uniform thickness of around 6.5 mm (). The
other two are around 5 mm (3/16). There are two smoother
regions at both sides of the central region, about 8 mm
(5/16") wide, clearly visible in the picture. Those are the surfaces where the braces must be glued.
The size and outline of the f-holes is quite tradi5onal. You
may enlarge them either to change the overall shape or to
make more room if you want to install bindings. These holes
follow the tradi5onal rule that locates the bridge approximately between their inner 5ps. When we men5on the bridge
area (and well do it a few 5mes), you will be able to locate it
easily if you remember this rule.
There is a par5ally nished aperture for the neck tenon. It is
undersized: 1.5 mm (around 1/16) smaller than it should be,
all around. You can compare its size now with the size of the
cavity in the neckblock, which has the right nal dimension.
The inside of the top has been machined using an upcut bit. This
means that the edge of all the ver5cal surfaces will surely need a
li6le cleaning of the dangling bers. Use a piece of sandpaper
(P120) everywhere that you see them; forget the areas that show
a lot of stair stepping, as they will be smoothed soon using other
methods. Be careful not to remove more than necessary, and
don't sand on the surfaces where the braces will be glued.
For all that follows, it is advisable to trace the outline of the guitar
at the top plate, inside. This can be done easily measuring 441
mm (17 23/64) from the end of the aperture for the neck tenon:
This distance will be measured with the top as supplied, i.e., with
the undersized aperture for the tenon.
Once the end point of the guitar at the tail has been found, all
that remains is to use the mold to trace the outline.
Fine tuning the top has to do with giving it enough structural s5ness and a long life free from deforma5ons, while at the same
5me giving good tone and volume.
If you choose not to modify the gradua5ons that will be great for
electric instruments, but you will denitely get a be6er acous5c
tone (and even its electric counterpart) if you modify some of
them. In par5cular, the area right behind the bridge is thicker than
necessary. I could have made it thinner but then, if you decided to
start an X-bracing design of your own, that area would probably
be weak.
Removing the wood from that area is easy with a chisel, as shown.
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Very important: for all the opera/ons that follow, don't remove
any wood from the smooth areas to the sides of the central region,
where the braces will be glued later. You will need to carve quite
close to them now; I recommend that you mark with a cu6er rst
and then cut with the chisel, as shown.
When you work at the tail end, don't carve beyond the last CNC
machining mark.
Remove the stair stepping from everywhere inside the top. Here I
am doing it with a nger plane, but you may use many other
things, electric sanders being a valid alterna5ve if you are good at
controlling them.
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Dont remove more wood than necessary. Also, it is very important that you work at a safe distance from the edge of the instrument to avoid modifying the at area that will be glued to the
sides.
Again, use gouges and chisels for reaching near the base of the
braces (be careful) and around the neck block gluing area.
If you are new to carving wood, you will discover that grain direc5on may guide the tool if the shavings are too thick, or if your
tools are dull. Tear-out as shown at le& can be avoided simply by
changing the carving angle or by adjus5ng the tool for a thinner
shaving. I suppose that your tool is sharp as a razor is it?
No5ce that we havent thinned the top ahead of the bridge. I have
found that this raises a li6le the feedback threshold but, if you
dont care, thin the area similarly to what you have done behind
the bridge.
If you do this, you should leave a round area below the bridge, extending
about 50 mm (2) to both ends, where the top must be around 6.5 mm thick.
Dont be afraid for the edge of the pickup hole being too fragile at 5 mm (or
less a&er thinning the outside): we will glue a small transverse brace there.
Next we will glue the braces. As men5oned, they are ready for
gluing. The brace to the right (corresponding to the non-cutaway
side) is marked "2". The other brace (cutaway side) is shorter and
it is marked "1".
Check that there are no gaps at any point along the en5re length
of the brace. Where there are faint machining marks, remove
them very carefully, using sandpaper or, preferably, a razor blade.
Glue them, one at a 5me. As always, clean the ooze out.
I have used four small and four large cam clamps. It can be done
with less, however. The braces tend to slip out of place when
clamped. To avoid this, press them in place by hand before clamping, and dont apply full clamping pressure at rst. Use whatever
clamps you have available, but try not to use heavy clamps that
may harm or even break the top.
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A&er the glue has dried, begin removing wood from the top of the
braces with a chisel.
The central area of the top must be s5 from neck to tail. You can
check it by pu7ng pressure with your thumbs, using the mold as a
support.
You will feel that the bridge area deforms more under the same
pressure, the main reason being that it is at the center of the top.
Carve the braces so thatyou can feel more or less the same s5ness at the bridge and near the end of the braces at the tail area,
where I am pressing in the picture. That means that the tail end of
the braces will have to be thinner. How much thinner is a subjec5ve ques5on, but this picture will let you judge how the braces
should look a&er this ini5al carving:
The highest point is at the bridge area, where their tops should be
at a height of around 18 mm (11/16") above the surface of the
top.
You may want to remove some more wood making the braces
lower. That's correct; in fact, if you have followed my recommneda5ons you must have an ample safety margin.
Sand the braces and the rest of the top (P80, P120, P180 and
P220). If you use an electric sander, like I'm doing here, be careful
with the f-holes. Almost all sanders are too big for the central sec5on between the braces, so you'll have to hand sand there.
Glue a piece of the same material that you used for the side reinforcement strips (spruce) to reinforce the pickup end grain. It
must go between the braces:
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If you have used an electric sander, sand the top manually (P220)
following the direc5on of the grain. Electric sanders usually leave
very small spiral marks, but even if they are invisible inside the
closed soundbox, a smooth surface is great at avoiding the dust
s/cking to it.
There is a situa5on when sanding marks inside the soundbox may become visible, and it is a&er you seal it with shellac (we won't do this). Some makers
favor this prac5ce because it slows the exchange of humidity with the environment.
Note that the contour line has disappeared in many places a&er
sanding. You may trace it again, but only if you know posi/vely
that you are going to install binding at the top/sides joint. Otherwise, be extremely cau5ous with the pencil: when you glue the
top to the sides, it will make the joint much more visible.
The techniques and tools that you have used for the top will also work for the back. Being quite
close to the nal gradua5ons, it will not be dicult to carve it in spite of curly maple being so temperamental.
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(Note: You can use the mid line at the mold instead)
The rst photo shows how to mark the sides with that measurement, using a machinist square. With all those references, and
using the sides already assembled inside the mold, trace the outline of the tailblock and neckblock, as in the second photo. Never
carve beyond the lines or too close to the edge of the instrument
(third photo).
Curly maple is much easier to work if your tool goes across the
grain. In case of trouble, change direc5on. Here I am using a nger
plane, but you can use gouges instead.
Near the tailblock you will have to remove more wood, crea5ng an
abrupt transi5on.
Near the neck end, round the corner of the ver5cal wall at the
neckblock transi5on.
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46
This is the aspect of the area near the neckblock a&er carving it.
Here you can see the carved back, right before sanding. Its thickness is more or less constant, around 5mm (3/16") everywhere.
The ame is more evident now.
Sand the back, using P80 or rougher and then going up to 220. You
may use an electric sander, but the last step should be done manually, following the direc5on of the grain. Electric sanders usually
leave very small spiral marks, but even if they are invisible inside
the closed soundbox, a smooth surface is great at avoiding the
dust s/cking to it.
There is a situa5on when sanding marks inside the soundbox may become visible, and it is a&er you seal it with shellac (we won't do this). Some makers
favor this prac5ce because it slows the exchange of humidity with the environment.
The ame is less evident now, but it will jump again a&er the nish
is applied.
Note that the contour line has disappeared in many places a&er
sanding. You may trace it again, but only if you know posi/vely
that you are going to install binding at the back/sides joint. Otherwise, be extremely cau5ous with the pencil: when you glue the
back to the sides, it will make the joint much more visible.
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Probably this is the part that will take more 5me and eort from you. Necks have a lot of parts, and
must be built under very low tolerances. Despite the many steps, you will not face dicult problems if, as always, you don't rush things and read everything very well before grasping a tool.
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50
Cord, 8 meters/yards
Sandpaper (P80, P120, P180, P220, P360, P600, P800, P1200)
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52
Procedure
Before doing anything, take your 5me studying the neck. It is
made of three main lamina5ons, that become ve at the peghead.
As other parts that you have seen before, it shows stair stepping.
The picture also shows that the CNC machine didn't nish the peghead transi5on completely.
The top of the peghead, where the maker usually writes his name,
has not been cut. This is because the design of the peghead is
usually one of the signatures of the maker. There are many designs for which the holes are not where I have drilled them, but I
decided to drill them anyway, as it is a process that can go wrong
quite easily.
No5ce the channel for the truss rod. Its bo6om is semicircular, but
it has the same depth everywhere. At the heel end there is a hole
for the barrel nut. No5ce also that the area right below the nut
has two parallel pencil marks. They represent the two faces of the
nut, i.e., the beginning of the peghead and the beginning of the
fretboard.
The CNC machine could not remove all the wood from the tenon,
due to the radius of the cu6er.
Our rst task will be to install the truss rod. Measure 1/2 (13
mm) from the beginning of the peghead (the vertex of its angle)
to the beginning of the access cavity; draw two lines (the sides of
the cavity) at a distance of 7/16 (11 mm).
Clamp the peghead, not the neck: with the truss rod channel
empty, it can break easily. The kits include the two waste pieces
that were cut from the sides of the peghead so that you can use a
conven5onal vise, as shown in the picture.
With a narrow chisel and a hammer, cut the ver5cal wall at the
beginning of the cavity. Be very careful: it must be normal (perpendicular) to the surface where the fretboard will be glued, not
to the peghead.
Use a gouge to open the rest of the cavity. This opera5on and the
previous one must be done in several steps, each one deeper.
To check that you have reached the right depth, screw the brass
nut to the rod (to the side with a longer threaded sec5on), put it
in place and try to turn the nut with the supplied wrench; It must
be possible to insert and turn it, but try to remove the minimum
amount of wood.
Remove the brass nut and screw the barrel nut to the end of the
rod with the shortest length of threads. Check that the access at
the other end, brass nut and washer, is correct; when you are sa5sed, peen the barrel nut to the rod using a hardened steel center punch and a heavy hammer. Do it at both sides of the barrel
nut.
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54
Wrap the rod in PTFE tape and insert it inside the channel.
Note: Although the truss rod has 10-32 threads at its ends, it has been made
from 5 mm instead of 3/16" (4.8 mm) rod. Anyway, as the width of the channel is a hair above 5 mm, you won't probably nd problems inser5ng the rod
with the tape in it. If you do, le lightly each side of the rod.
Cut the cover to size, glue it above the rod (Titebond) and press it
with three or four clamps. Do the same for that sec5on of the
channel that doesn't have a rod below; for this, shape the base of
the wood cover with some sandpaper un5l it has a semicircular
sec5on (the bo6om of the channel is round)
Don't throw away the cover le over. We will use it later.
Once the glue gas dried, use a wide chisel and then a cabinet scraper to remove the truss rod cover excess.
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Center the fretboard and place it above the pencil mark. This is
because the nished nut, ini5ally 5 mm thick, will be a li6le thinner in the end due to sanding and polishing. Ideally, the nut
should t perfectly inside its channel; this is one of the places
where guitar making needs all your precision, so take your 5me
posi5oning the fretboard prior to gluing it. Hold it with strong
spring clamps.
Check the alignment once more, and then drill two holes at the
rst and last fret. They must have a diameter a hair below the diameter of a toothpick (I use a 2 mm bit not all toothpicks are
equal, not even inside the same box, but they use to be a li6le
more than that).
The main problem to avoid when gluing the fretboard is neck distor5on. As the gluing surface is large, you will have to use a lot of
clamps. These are usually heavy, so it is common that the neck is
under stress while the glue dries. A part of the problem can be attributed to the water in the glue (Titebond in this case), but that
must be a much less important factor. In my experience, the best
way to avoid this problem is to let the neck rest on its side while
the glue sets, using iden5cal clamps placed to the same side.
While the glue is s5ll wet, you can clean some or all the slots with
a small tool that you may nd at some lutherie suppliers or at
some hobby shops, or even make yourself (as I did). If you are careful placing the cord over the frets, you will be able to clean
them all.
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A&er the glue is dry, remove the cord and clean the slots again if
necessary.
Before sanding the fretboard, check its straightness with a straightedge and correct if necessary with a cabinet scraper or sandpaper (P80 or P120). Then sand the en5re fretboard surface un5l
you cannot see any router marks. You may use a radiused sanding
block (12" curvature radius) or a straight wooden block; avoid
using any so backing.
Always watch the ends of the fretboard at the rst and last frets: it
is easy to sand them more than necessary. If that happened, it
wouldn't be very no5ceable now, but it surely would show up
a&er the fretboard surface was polished.
Sand the sides of the fretboard so that the transi5on between the
fretboard and the main body of the neck is smooth. With a pencil,
draw a line along it and locate the center of frets 3, 5, 7, 9, 15, 17
and 19. These must be marked with single side dots. Fret #12
must be marked with a double dot.
Drill the holes (hand drill!) at the points marked, using a 1/16
(1.5 mm) bit at a depth of around 3 mm (1/8).
Use superglue for gluing enough length of the white plas5c rod.
A&er the glue sets, le them even with the fretboard surface.
Now you will sand and true the bone for the nut. This is the rst
step for preparing the gluing of the headplate. The bone is probably rough now, but it will shine if you sand it following the grades: P220, P360, P600, P800, and P1200. Wrap some tape around
your ngers to aid holding it against the sandpaper; always try to
keep its faces well squared.
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60
Hold everything with strong spring clamps and drill two holes (2
mm). There will be one near the nut; the loca5on of the other
hole depends on your design for the headstock, but you cannot be
very wrong if you place it at the upper corner, as shown. Use toothpicks as you did when you glued the fretboard.
Note: Most commercial headplates have a width of 3. This is not enough for
most archtop headstocks, that are a li6le wider, so many makers need to cut
and paste peghead material. I have enough stock of 4 wide peghead veneers, and that's what I will supply with the kit.
Plug the veneer into the guiding toothpicks and you will have the
reference of where to cut.
Drill some holes and then work with les and chisels un5l you get
the access right.
Now you can glue the headplate, using Titebond. Use a at block
above it to even up the clamping pressure (some MDF le&over
from the mold...?). Don't clamp too strong or you may break the
peghead; it is be6er to use many clamps with a moderate pressure at each one. You don't want a lot of glue inside the tuner
holes or the truss rod access cavity: use as li6le as possible and, as
always, clean the ooze out.
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I am sure that you will prefer to use some kind of sanding drum
instead of doing it all by hand.
A&er that, use coping saw, chisel, cabinet scraper and sandpaper
to trim the ebony headplate to the peghead shape.
In the future, if you decide to use the same peghead design, you may want to
use a router with a template. Unfortunately (for this opera5on), I have cut almost the en5re peghead shape, and this makes it much more probable that
you get chipping problems where the bit exits the wood. To avoid that, you
may use a spiral bit and a rou5ng guide (these bits are too thin for using them
with bearings). Or, if you use a pa6ern bit, remove as much wood as possible
at the end of the peghead where the bit exits the wood.
Next, drill the tuner holes for the headplate, preferably using a
drill press (10 mm bit). It is very important that you use a backing
for the peghead and press rmly to avoid chipping the ebony. If
you want to reduce even more that danger, don't rely on your
own strength alone: use some kind of clamping between the peghead and the backing.
Saw o the end of the neck and rene it with sandpaper using a
hard sanding block.
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64
Now you will have to cut the corners at the tenon that the CNC
machine couldn't nish (there are three). Use a chisel and a mallet
and remove the wood gradually as shown in the rst two photos.
Finally, smooth the end corners to around a 1/4 (6.5 mm) curvature radius.
Before installing the frets, we'll sand and polish the fretboard.
Many makers will polish it a&er the frets are installed, probably
because they use some kind of glue for the frets that will mess up
the polished wood. I don't use any glue, and I've never had any
fret li&ing problems, but you may do as you like: there are many
good sources on the subject of fre7ng and there is not a best method yet.
The fretboard should be already sanded to P80 or P120. Go gradually through the sandpaper grades un5l you arrive at P1200, always using a hard sanding block. Watch the ends of the fretboard
at the rst and last frets: it is easy to sand them more than necessary. Finally, polish it to give it a high luster. I use a small co6on
bung wheel on the drill press, without any polishing compound.
You may use some kind of wool pad and work manually or even
Micromesh to get the same result.
Clean the fret slots again; compressed air is great, but you can do
it with a brush. The nished fretboard, right before installing the
frets, should look like the picture.
The fretwire in the kit is already curved to match the curved fretboard surface. In fact, it is curved more than necessary, because
that helps the fret ends to seat be6er. Cut each individual fret so
that you have an excess of around 5 mm (3/16) at both sides.
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66
The fret ends must t over the bindings, so you must remove a
small length of the tangs there; there is a great tool for this at
Stewmac, shown at le&. If you don't have one, you can s5ll trim
the tangs with a le.
I like to use a le anyway to remove the small burr le& by the tool.
For each fret installed, bend down a li6le its ends with the hammer. This will denitely avoid any end gap between the fret and
the fretboard. Don't over bend: the moment that the fret starts to
bend, you know that it has bi6en the fretboard. Finally, cut the excess using the end nippers.
If you nd problems using the hammer (I don't think so) there are
other alterna5ves (fret presses) at aordable prices.
A&er all the frets are installed, le their ends with a long metal
le. Do it at a slight angle.
Wri5ng your name on the headstock should be the next step. This
can be done in many ways; I use mostly inlaid mother-of-pearl,
CNC cut.
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I did that manually in the past; I used (s5ll use) 1.5 mm thick pearl,
and cut it with a jeweler's saw. Then I traced the contour of the
sawn pieces on the headstock and used a small bit in a small router (Dremel) to open the cavity. Finally, I glued the pearl in the cavity with a glue capable of lling the voids (I s5ll prefer pigmented
superglue instead of epoxy). I agree that this is an incomplete descrip5on: whatever I could say in a reasonable amount of space
would be incomplete, and you would like to consult other sources
anyway. S5ll, if you don't feel condent, you may use a white-ink
pen for signing the headstock if you do it well, it can be very attrac5ve.
The cabinet scraper is the best tool for removing the CNC machining marks. When you don't see them anymore, sand the neck
with P120, P180 and P220.
Use a half-round le for shaping the small area at the peghead
that the router could not reach.
A&er all these opera5ons, this is the way the neck should look:
By Main Assembly, I mean closing the soundbox. It is not uncommon to have some problems a&er
doing this; typically, irregular or not quite ver5cal sides. Hopefully the mold design, with its unusual
magnets, will help you avoid these problems.
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No5ce that it is a li6le bigger than the outline of the guitar. I recommend that you make it without a cutaway, as shown. The legs
(the three rectangles inside it) raise the plate about 2 inches (50
mm).
My main at base has a cutaway, but it would be be6er without it.
It can be used for guitars up to 18 inches. Instead of three it has
two legs, glued and screwed, but is equivalent to what I have explained.
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Procedure
The width of the neck where it joins the soundbox (14th fret) is 55
mm. Thus, its mid line is at 27.5 mm (1.08") from the wall of the
cutaway, as it was men5oned when we carved the back plate.
Trace it, if not already traced, using a machinist square.
Place the at plate on the table, and then the mold with the sides
inside. Place the magnets and a wooden s5ck of 389 mm (15.31")
to press the end blocks apart.
Align the back using the line that you have traced and the middle
lines of the sides and back at both ends. Watch the inside o&en,
especially if you have carved the back very close to the end blocks.
When sa5sed, clamp the back temporarily.
Glue a few stop pieces like these around the back, using superglue.
For gluing them, I use a base (a cabinet scraper) with which I push
the pieces up against the back; on top of the scraper there is a
small wooden s5ck that I use to push them against the side. Be careful to glue the pieces only to the back.
Now you can glue the back (Titebond). Use glue very sparingly, to
avoid excessive ooze out.
If you use small wooden blocks under the clamps, you won't need
as many. I have used a con5nuous block around the contour of the
back, that is faster to set than individual lengths. It is more dicult to make, however.
No5ce that there are a couple of clamps out of the con5nuous
block, pressing directly upon the back. These are necessary to
guarantee good gluing pressure at the neckblock and tailblock
areas.
When the glue is dry, extract the sides from the mold and clean
the glue excess with a chisel. If the amount of glue was right, you
shouldn't clean much more than what's shown in the picture.
Learn as much as you can now: when you glue the top, you won't
be able to clean the excess.
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A&er removing the stop pieces you'll have to trim the overhang
from the back plate. If you don't have a rou/ng table or a similar
jig, then I recommend that you remove the overhang using manual
tools.
Don't leave this step for later: if you do, you will not be able to remove the soundbox from the mold a er gluing the top!
A rou5ng table has a router below, with its bit protruding through
it. The soundbox is kept parallel to the table by means of three
"legs" (modied spool clamps) that can be adjusted to any soundbox depth. They keep the guitar above the table at a height a li6le
higher than the maximum arching of the plates.
I use a long Flush Trim bit (bearing above the cu6ers). It cuts the
overhang fast and cleanly.
If you use a rou5ng table, you will have to take into account two
very important things.
The rst is safety: the bit is exposed, so take every conceivable precau/on, including a hood for it (that I don't use, but I should).
The second is tear-out. As you know, hand held routers must be
fed against the piece ("conven5onal cu7ng"). This is safe for you,
but not as much for the piece, that may suer tear-out. The simplest way to avoid this is to not let the bit reach full depth at rst
at the problem areas, while s/ll keeping the conven/onal cu1ng
direc/on. Don't use old/bad quality bits either.
This may not always avoid tear-out, especially with spruce tops,
that show li6le cohesion parallel to the grain. It will be more eec5ve if you manually remove as much wood as you can from the
areas marked "!":
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76
Glue the wiring guides at the places shown, using superglue. Pass
a thread through them and 5e and tape the end securely near the
pickup area. This thread will be used to pass the wiring through
the guides; if you don't tape it well, it may become extremely dangerous if caught while rou5ng the binding or bung the nish.
Preparing the top for gluing will be a li6le more complicated. The
rst thing to do will be to measure the length of the neck extension. It must be around 91 mm (3.58"), but it may vary, perhaps
because you sanded the neck end dierently.
Draw the mid lines inside the neckblock and at the edge of the
top, as shown.
Align the midlines at both ends of the instrument and adjust the
distance from the edge of the pickup hole to the outer surface of
the sides. It should be the length of the extension that we found
plus 5 mm (3/16"). In this case, around 96 mm.
Glue a stop piece, as we did before for the back, to freeze the correct loca5on of the top rela5ve to the sides.
Make a stack as you did for the back, but this 5me don't use the
at base. Instead, put some wooden blocks under the mold so
that the back doesn't touch the table. Insert the sides in the mold
again, with the magnets.
Align the top again and glue the stop pieces around it, as you did
for the back. Before closing the box, be sure to sign the top and/or
glue a label to the back (usually visible through the bass-side fhole).
The magnets must be in place, but this 5me don't use the wooden
s5ck from block to block.
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Glue the top the same way as the back. This 5me you don't have a
at base below, so youll have to nd a way of not marring the
back, especially with the two clamps that press directly on the
soundbox. No5ce that I have used again the "con5nuous block".
When the glue has dried, remove the clamps and the end bolt of
the mold. A&er that, you will be able to extract the soundbox
quite easily. Recover the magnets through the f-holes.
Follow the direc5ons given above for rou5ng the plate overhang,
now for the top. This is the new feed diagram:
It is very important that the sides are true. Work with a scraper
and sandpaper un5l you feel (touch them with your eyes closed)
that they are smooth and regular.
Remove the side wood at the body mor5se. Be very careful with
the edges of the top, especially at the bass side. Remove also the
excess at the cutaway side. Finally, use the rou5ng table to remove the top overhang inside the mor5se.
If you join the neck now (don't insert it fully though), you'll see a
guitar emerge for the rst 5me. No5ce that the tenon is slightly
narrower than necessary, so you'll probably need to shim it.
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80
Far from being a purely cosme5c add-on, the binding has a purpose protec5ng the edge of the
soundbox from small dents. This is more probable if the top, as usual, is made of a so& wood such
as spruce. Unfortunately, binding a guitar is not easy, even less an archtop.
Tuning the soundbox is one of the most ethereal steps at making a guitar. You'll nd makers favoring
a lot of dierent techniques, leading to dierent nal gradua5ons. Each one has a concept of how a
carved plate should be and work and, given the great results of so many personal approaches, I
don't believe that there is a magical "best" method for this.
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Apart from this, you will need chisels, sandpaper, cabinet scrapers
and a small nger plane in case you have one. Nothing new at this
phase of the project.
You will need the following supplies:
Binding, #9
Closed soundbox
Glue (read the discussion below)
Tape
Sandpaper (P80, P120, P180 and P220)
At the end of this sec5on you will nd the procedure for drilling
the hole for a6aching the tailpiece bolt. The necessary tools and
supplies are explained there.
Procedure
As I said before, I use the Binding Cu6er/Bearing kit from Luthier's
Mercan5le, using the correct bearing for the supplied binding: the
kit, unless noted, has .060" (1.5 mm) thick binding.
The guitar is kept horizontal above the table using the same supports("legs") that we used for rou5ng the top and back overhang,
except that here we will use only two. The third support will be
the ring that surrounds the router bit. Obviously, you will have to
move the legs as you progress rou5ng the contour. Do it so that
the surface of the triangle dened by the two legs plus the ring is
as big as possible.
The cu6ers must project around 6 mm above the surface of the
ring (a li6le less than 1/4"). I personally don't nd it necessary to
climb cut to avoid tear out, even in spruce, but take your precau5ons, as explained in the previous chapter.
I rout the en5re contour changing three 5mes the posi5on of the
legs. When you do this, the channel may show a small step if
there is some error in your tool, for example, the legs not having
the same height, the table not being at or something similar.
Given that the third support is the ring itself, these discrepancies
have a very limited eect, and you will surely remove them with a
second pass of the router. Don't disregard these small errors: they
are the dierence between rst and second-class jobs.
You have several alterna5ves for gluing the plas5c binding. Weldon 16 must the most common these days, but you may use UHU
Hart (similar to Duco). If you use cyanochrylate (super glue), be
warned that it is not as easy to use as the slower glues. With it,
glue lines will be visible most 5mes, and puring lines won't be as
sharp and uniform as if you use a solvent-based glue.
I will use another alterna5ve: plas5c (from the same bindings, for
example) dissolved in acetone un5l it has the consistency of glue.
Even if you use some other thing, you should have some of this
mixture to join white bindings, as you can get completely invisible
glue lines. If you make a 50/50 mixture of UHU hart and this plas5c solu5on, you'll get the (for me) best glue for gluing white bindings.
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Use tape for holding the bindings in place while the glue sets. Use
a strong one, for example lament tape. Press it against the side,
pull strong and then press it against the top or back.
Use a good amount of glue, and clean the excess thoroughly before taping the binding in place.
The bindings are long enough to avoid using a joint at the tail.
When you arrive at a curved area like the waist or the inside of the
cutaway, work the binding with your ngers un5l it has the correct
curvature, as shown. You may be tempted to use a heat gun to soften the plas5c, but I don't recommend it: it is very easy to heat the
plas5c more than necessary. With the binding in the kit, .060"
thick, a heat gun is not necessary. No5ce that I am really using
.090" binding here, and even at that thickness a heat gun is unnecessary.
This is the top a&er binding it.
The back is bound similarly, but you have a joint at the cutaway
corner. Treat it the same way as the joint between the wooden
sides. Start installing the binding from the non-cutaway side and
trim the excess before gluing the other side. Try to use plas5c dissolved in acetone or, alterna5vely, wet the joint with acetone before gluing.
A&er the glue has set (a few hours should be enough), remove the
tape. Do this carefully, at an angle, to avoid pulling wood bers
with the tape; while you don't have to be as careful as with attops (you'll be carving a recurve later anyway), you may s5ll do a
lot of damage.
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For you that have purchased this kit, there are two ways to see the
tuning of the soundbox. The rst is to simply follow the guidelines
here or at some other place. You will get a great sounding guitar, I
am sure. Play it, alone or with your friends, and be happy. Skip the
following paragraph and enjoy.
The second approach is not as easy. Try to listen to what other makers have to say about your work or theirs. Listen also to what
good musicians, guitarists or not, have to say about your guitar.
Compare it with others, even dissimilar: at tops, bigger archtops,
whatever. Do the comparisons again with dierent strings, for
example bronze. You'll start to discover that you may have been
biased, but you are not the only one. Be concerned that, quite
probably, there won't be a general agreement on the tone of your
guitar. Be ready to hear contradictory opinions from respected
makers or musicians. Humans don't agree even with themselves at
dierent moments or situa5ons, and are easily impressed with
other things not related to the tone of the guitar: learn from that
too; I could tell you many stories about it. Make guitars, as many
as you can. Submit them to all those tests. With 5me, you'll develop an objec5ve sense for evalua5ng a guitar, and you'll start to
hear things in your unnished soundbox. You'll have sympathy and
probably will adhere to some (or all) of the tribes in this eld:
those that work mostly feeling the vibra5on with the 5p of their
ngers, those that mainly put pressure with their thumbs, the
ones that tune the plates while they are not glued to the sides,
those that tune the closed soundbox, those who tap the plates,
those who excite modes with pure tones, those who analyze the
impulse response, the chemists that try to nd the composi5on of
the varnish, the botanists, even the mys5cs... feel free to listen to
all of them: most 5mes there's something interes5ng there, some5mes a lot, but try to take it with a grain of salt.
Start scraping the recurve for the top, as shown. You can do it with
a gouge, a rounded cabinet scraper or a nger plane, as I am doing
here. Check the thickness near the f-hole: you'll be able to es5mate how much wood you are removing from other places. Don't
remove wood from above the neck and tail blocks or from the
central area of the instrument. Tap the top at dierent places as
you carve the recurve, ge7ng familiar with the change in tone as
you progress. For that, you will have to learn to isolate it from
other sources of vibra5on, especially the back and the main resonance of the air in the box.
Working on a so& pad will make it easier. The top will lower its
pitch, and it will get denite, more musical, as you remove wood
from the recurve. Stop when its thickness is around 3.5 mm, as
checked through the f-holes.
If you go below 3 mm or so, you'll hear that the tap tone starts to
change: instead of ge7ng more musical, it will start sounding dull.
You must stop the carving before ge7ng there, so you must learn
to start hearing that change in the sanded top. That's why you
must switch from edge tools to sandpaper when the recurve is at
about 3.5 mm.
Sand the whole top from P80 to P120, trying to keep it at a minimum out of the recurve area.
Do the same with the back. You won't hear this dullness here, so
work feeling the change in s5ness at the recurve, ini5ally a very
s5 area that doesn't deform no5ceably under the pressure of
your thumbs. Remove wood un5l you can feel it exing with a moderate pressure.
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Now it is 5me to drill a hole for the tailpiece at the tail end. No5ce
that it will be a6ached to the guitar by means of a bolt that screws
through the top and into the tailblock.
The bolt must be approximately perpendicular to the tailpiece as
the strings pull towards the top of the bridge saddle. Thus, it is necessary that the hole for it is drilled at an angle.
Start marking the loca5on of the bolt: draw a point on the top at
the central line of the instrument, 22 mm (7/8") from the edge.
Use double sided adhesive tape for s5cking a small piece of wood
taken from the truss rod wooden cover. If you threw it away, use a
piece of wood around 5 mm (3/16") thick. Place it at around 50
mm (2") from the edge (this is not a cri5cal distance).
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The second thing that you must check now is the alignment of the
neck with the axis of the instrument. Use a long straightedge res5ng on the ngerboard edges and extending to the tail end, and
mark two lines there. The center line of the instrument must be
midway between both. If you nd a discrepancy of more than 2
mm, you'll have to modify the tenon. However, as before, don't
expect this to happen.
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Once sa5sed with the adjustments, you'll have to rene the joint
un5l the gaps are minimal. Before doing that, subs5tute the temporary shim for a permanent one, using the maple veneer that
comes with the kit (#37) and se7ng its thickness with a scraper or
a sander.
At some point you may have to remove wood from the underside
of the tenon to keep an appropriate gap there.
When you are sa5sed, carefully sand out the stains from the carbon paper and then prepare to glue the joint. Before that, use
some masking tape as shown; it avoids the glue ooze out reaching
the sanded top and the neck. Use only enough glue (Titebond) for
the lateral surfaces of the joint, but be sure to wet both the tenon
and mor/se. Press the neck un5l you don't see any gaps, but have
long and short clamps at your reach just in case you need to push
on some part of the neck: 5ght joints behave badly when they
have liquid glue inside. Work fast in any case, nally clamping the
work with one or two cam clamps. Once the glue is dry, remove
the tape (be careful with the top: you may need a heat gun to
avoid damaging its bers).
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The thickness of the heel cap must make the binding at the back
totally visible below it, as shown at le&. There shouldn't be side
wood visible between the neck cap and the back binding; otherwise, the end grain at the lap joint between the sides will be visible. If you didn't bind the back, this end grain shouldn't exist,
because there must be a miter joint, as men5oned in the note in
page 23.
No5ce that the guitar in this manual has a visible lap joint because, as we said
in page 23, its heel is not tall enough. This has been corrected in produc5on
kits.
Measure and shape the heel cap (#22) as shown, using a coping
saw and sandpaper un5l it has the required shape and thickness.
Glue it, using two clamps to push it against the two surfaces involved. Finally, a&er the glue has set, sand the heel, its cap and the
inside of the cutaway un5l all the transi5ons are smooth.
Step 9: Finishing
Guitars are not as sensi5ve to the type of nish as other stringed instruments seem to be. A good nish should help you create a uniform, thin, transparent, smooth, repairable and durable coa5ng.
With so many requirements (and the list is not complete), you will understand that there is not a
perfect nish. In this sec5on, my objec5ve is more trying to help you decide what to use and give
you some general rules than explaining in detail some of the alterna5ves.
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Step 9 - Finishing
There are a lot of nishes that makers and factories use for guitars. These are all common:
Nitrocellulose lacquer
Waterbase
Shellac
Polyurethane (two-component)
Polyester
Conversion Varnish (Acid Catalyst Lacquer)
What follows is oriented to nishes that coat the wood completely, either with a shiny or sa5n look. There are oil nishes that are
more or less absorbed into the wood and which many players like,
but I won't talk about them.
Ideally, the nish must have the following characteris5cs:
Transparency.- All the nishes men5oned above rate very
high, including the best modern waterbase (not so for the old formula5ons).
Repairability.- Nitrocellulose and Shellac are repairable as
they harden by evapora5on of their solvents instead of through a
chemical reac5on. The new coats of nish fuse with the old, forming a single thicker coat. The other types of nish are dicult to
repair without leaving telltale marks. In general, the more resistant a nish is to chemicals, the harder it is to repair.
Low Toxicity.- This is desirable for you and for the environment. Waterbase uses mainly water and Shellac uses ethanol as its
only solvent, so these must be the least toxic nishes in the list.
The other nishes are all dangerous for your health or the environment.
Step 9 - Finishing
brushing at least some of them. Waterbase can be applied carefully with a foam pad, trying to avoid any bubbles. Nitrocellulose,
if thinned with an adequate thinner, may be applied with a conven5onal brush, but be warned that it won't be easy.
Some nishes require expensive guns. Conversion uses an acid
catalyst, which will probably require a stainless steel gun (or, at
least, stainless steel uid passages).
Some nishes, especially the polys, cover the wood very well
to the point that pore lling is unnecessary even with porous
woods such as mahogany.
Short drying/curing 5me.- Nitrocellulose and Conversion
varnish rate low here. They need at least three weeks, although
Nitrocellulose will keep shrinking for years. Most waterbases are
ready for bung in less than two weeks, while polys may be ready
the same day.
Tradi5on.- Nitrocellulose is by far the most tradi5onal nish for archtop guitars. Shellac has been used tradi5onally for the
best classical guitars, but it doesn't have a tradi5on for archtops.
All the other nishes can be considered as non-tradi5onal, modern alterna5ves. This is not related to the quality of the nish,
but it may be important for some players.
Good Adhesion.- I have had problems with Waterbase nishes, reac5ng to the perspira5on of some players and then peeling o. This may be a thing of the past (I am talking of waterbase
nishes designed around 2002 but sold specically for guitars).
Polyurethane and Conversion may also suer adhesion problems,
but most 5mes that seems to be related to excessive lm thickness.
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Step 9 - Finishing
Step 9 - Finishing
drying cabins are expensive and out of the reach of most small
makers, though.
Cleaning the spray gun or brush may be awkward for some nishes, and that is complicated even more when they have a very
short life, as most polys.
Fusing .- As the nish will be sanded and bued, it must
have enough thickness that must be built coat a&er coat. The
coats must fuse together or you may get a nasty eect that is
known as witness lines. Only evapora5ve nishes fuse perfectly,
but all the other will fuse enough if you apply each coat within
some 5me window. Sanding right before applying the following
coat will help exposing fresh nish and improving the mechanical
bond between coats.
Smoothness.- Some nishes feel a li6le s5cky. This is a
common problem with Nitrocellulose, and less with Polyurethane,
Polyester and Conversion varnish. Few players will complain,
though.
Long Shelf Life - Most Nitrocellulose lacquers specify a
shelf life of around 1 year, but most makers will tell you that it can
be used a&er many years without any problem. Shellac has an indenite shelf life when undissolved. Once dissolved in alcohol, it
will be suspect a&er six months: old shellac doesn't dry well, staying gummy, and will ruin any other nish if used as a sealer
below it. The other nishes must be used as indicated in their
technical documenta5on.
:::
A good nish is not complete without a good nisher that achieves uniform and thin coa5ngs.
Uniformity is hard to achieve, and it can be controlled be6er using
a brush or a pad. If you use a spray gun, you will discover sooner
or later that you are not being uniform, coa5ng some areas less
than others. There are ways to improve on this, and nishing
many guitars will help, of course. This may not be very useful if
you plan to make a few, so another technique is to 5nt the lacquer
(a drop of concentrated dye will be enough for 1 quart/liter) if it is
totally transparent. If the guitar has white bindings, it will be easy
to discover thinly nished areas before you get a sandthrough. Finishes look more natural when they have a slight amber hue,
much be6er than the transparent look or the bluish hues of some
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Step 9 - Finishing
Step 9 - Finishing
be 6ed without leaving cavi5es, especially near the frets; otherwise, the lacquer may get inside. Use a piece of drinking straw to
cover the threads of the truss rod. Finally, inate some balloons
inside the soundbox through the f and pickup holes, and place
some cardboard above them; this is a simple and eec5ve method
for avoiding lacquer into the soundbox. That cardboard can be
used to measure the thickness of the coa5ng as explained above.
Prepare the lacquer by mixing the two components. You'll need
around 600ml (conven5onal gun) to which you must add a drop of
ColorTone Vintage Amber dye or equivalent. Without it, this nish
is absolutely colorless. Once mixed, the lacquer remains usable for
around 36 hours.
The wood species tradi5onally used for archtops don't need any
pore lling, so we will simply spray the same nish on the guitar,
coat a&er coat.
Start early in the morning, spraying a light rst coat of nish. A&er
around one hour, examine the guitar for possible sanding marks
that went unno5ced; if you nd some, this is your last opportunity
to sand them. Apply three more coats, wai5ng around 2 hours and
sanding between them. Wait ve or six hours, sand again and
apply the &h coat. Wait two hours, sand and apply the last (sixth)
coat.
Two or three days later, when the nish is hard enough but not totally cured (it needs about three weeks), sand with P600 and then
turn to the following sec5on and do what must be done before
polishing and bung.
When totally cured, sand with P800. This nish is extremely easy
to sand dry, as it doesn't clog the sandpaper (I use 3M Gold). Sand
with P1500 (for example, Micromesh), and then use a drill with a
foam polishing pad and liquid compounds of dierent grits, the
last step being a swirl remover. Alterna5vely, if you have a bung
arbor, machine bu with Menzerna 38, 16 and 6 (in that order)
and, nally, use a drill with a foam pad to apply swirl remover. Purely manual methods are hard work; if you prefer them, Micromesh pads will be helpful.
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Summarizing, Morrells 5901/450 can be applied the same as nitro, and using a similar schedule. Sanding is easier, and the coa/ng is more resistant in all aspects,
but its chemical resistance, being high, is not as high as in polys: if you need to
strip it, it will be easy with a commercial stripper. This is good news for a reac/ve
lacquer, but that's not all: if the nish needs repair, it will fuse perfectly without leaving any telltale mark! Regarding exibility, I have tried other conversion varnishes and they are not exible enough to be applied on guitars even in very light
coats, but this one is amazingly exible. It has some nega/ve characteris/cs, of
course: it must be applied with a more expensive stainless steel gun, it is more sensi/ve to contaminants (water, oil) in the compressed air and it emits formaldehyde
while it cures, but if you nd a way around, you'll use the, in my experience, absolutely best product for nishing guitars.
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This chapter will cover the main items that make the guitar playable and useful for a musician. Even
having a ne tone, any player will dismiss a guitar if it has problems with ac5on or intona5on. Try
not to rush things now that it is almost nished: give all this the 5me that it deserves.
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Bridge, #17
Tailpiece, #18 and bolt, #31
Pickup ring, #19 and screws, #30
Finger rest, #20 and its parts, #32, #33 and #34
Truss rod nut cover, #21 and screws, #28
Strap holders, #36
Electronics (#43, #44, #45, #48)
Glue (Titebond, Super glue)
Naphta (lighter fuel)
Sandpaper (P80, P120, P180 and P220)
Procedure
These operaons can be done before the nish is ready to be sanded
and bued. Some of them may scratch the nish, so doing them now
should be the rule.
Check with the straightedge if you have some fret or group of frets
higher and use the le to correct it. Both the straightedge and the
le must be used more or less parallel to the axis of the instrument or more or less following the lies of the strings (the dierence between both methods is 5ny). Check frequently with the
straightedge un5l all frets have been at least touched from side to
side. Do not try to use the le without measuring rst where to
le, and watch closely the rst fret. It is easy to le it too much, an
error with bad consequences; to avoid that, be very careful when
you get close to the nut, pressing on the le always above the fretboard, far from the rst fret.
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When you are sa5sed with the leveling, use a wooden block and
sand (P600) to remove the nibs of lacquer that adhered to the fret
ends. Then use the fret le to recrown the frets. Stop when you
see a thin line untouched by the le.
Use the triangular le to smooth the fret ends, rounding the faceted edges at the ends of each fret. Some makers round the fret
ends completely; this will be easier if you use a rectangular fretend dressing le instead.
The two images show a fret end before and a&er being dressed
with the triangular le. Four or ve strokes at each side of the fret
are enough.
Polish each fret with the Dremel felt wheel #414 and #421 polishing compound; do not spend a lot of 5me at each fret, as they
can heat in excess. It is be6er to work with a group of several
frets, going from one to another cyclically. Be warned that the
#421 compound is not very ne. If you use ner compounds they
will give an even be6er mirror-like nish.
Clean all the frets with a piece of cloth and naphta (lighter fuel).
Remove the masking tape and con5nue cleaning everything un5l
you don't get any more polishing residue on the cloth.
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If you have followed the instruc5ons, the foot of the bridge must
be very close to its nal shape.
Place the bridge foot at its loca5on, well centered and oriented.
There are marks on it that will help you determine its correct
orienta5on, but you'll easily no5ce that an inverted bridge will be
very poorly 6ed to the top. Mark its center for reference and
then use carbon paper to determine the high spots, as shown. Remove them with a scraper un5l you have a good t everywhere.
Sand and polish the bridge foot (except its base) and saddle, from
P120 to P1200, then bu them as you did for the fretboard.
11.5 mm
22.8 mm
33.9 mm
44.8 mm
55.5 mm
Use a small circular le to, open a hole of around 1/8" (3 mm) diameter at the treble side of the pickup ring, as shown. It will be
used to pass the wiring from the soundbox to the nger rest. Then
as with all the ebony parts, sand (P120 to P1200) and bu as you
did for the fretboard.
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No5ce that the ring has not the holes for the pickup height screws;
drill them from below, using the pickup as a template. Don't drill
without clamping a wooden base to the ring, as shown. Then
mount the pickup in the neck ring.
When the glue has set, drill two holes for the installa5on screws
(1/8", 3.2 mm diameter) as close to the nger rest surface as possible, but leaving enough room for the screw heads.
Cut the corners of the notch for the pickup ring that the router
couldn't reach due to the radius of the cu6er.
With the pickup ring s5ll screwed to the top, posi5on the nger
rest as shown. It must have the same angle as the neck, as if it was
an extension of it, and its top must be in line with the top surface
of the pickup ring. If you fail doing these adjustments, you may
compromise the room for the poten5ometer. Mark the loca5on of
the holes at the neck (you'll need a thin and long marker for this).
Drilling the holes for the nger rest at the side of the neck is easy
with a long drill. I use a miniature drill (found in hobby shops) with
an extension a6ached and then inserted into a bigger manual drill.
Use a 2.5 mm (3/32") bit.
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Use a long screwdriver to a6ach the nger rest to the guitar. Soap
the threads if you nd the screws are too hard. If you nd some
misalignment, enlarge one or both nger rest holes with a miniature le.
Remove the nger rest and the pickup. Sand and bu the surface
and edge of the nger rest the same as you did for the other
ebony parts. Don't let the dust reach the poten5ometer: protect it
with tape.
Cut and sand the excess leaving some material above the pencil
line. At the 6th string, that excess (A in the gure) must be around
1 mm; at the side of the 1st string, it will be around 0.5 mm (B in
the gure).
The top of the nut must be more or less at a plane parallel to the
peghead, and its upper corners must be rounded slightly. The
ends of the nut are cut ush with the neck surfaces.
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I recommend that you open the string slots using nut les. If you
use a miniature saw, try to keep the bo6om of the slots round.
There are two principles that are generally accepted for determining the posi5on of the string slots:
1.- The outside edges (not the centers) of the 6th and 1st
strings must be at around the same distance from their corresponding fretboard edges. As for most common string sets the
sixth is around 1 mm thicker than the rst string, the center of
the slot for the rst string must be around 0.5 mm closer to the
edge of the fretboard.
2.- It is the space between each pair of adjoining strings that is
constant, not the distance between their centers. Thus, the
centers of the thinner strings are closer than the centers of the
thicker strings.
The following procedure fullls those requirements for 1 3/4" nuts
and the string gauges most commonly found in jazz guitars:
- Mark the slots with the thinnest nut le at the following loca5ons:
From fretboard edge to center of 6th string: 4 mm
From center of 6th to center of 5th: 7.8 mm
From center of 6th to center of 4th: 15.5 mm
From center of 6th to center of 3rd: 22.8 mm
From center of 6th to center of 2nd: 30.0 mm
From center of 6th to center of 1st: 37 mm
-Widen each slot using les increasingly thicker. For example,
use the le for the 2nd string to widen the slots for the 2nd to
6th strings. This will give you more control and the ability to correct the misplaced slots. And remember, don't le deeper
than half the diameter of the string.
Polish the whole nut (except its base) the same as you did when
you polished its sides.
Insert the terminals into the small connector, ground (jacket) terminal at le&.
Do the same for the large connector, using 15cm (6") of two-conductor shielded wire. Posi5on the ground (jacket) terminal at
right, and the other two wires (dark and clear) as shown.
The pickup must be connected to the male plug. The hot from the
pickup is connected to terminal #2. The ground from the pickup is
connected to both #3 and #4. Addi5onally, there is a wire connec5ng #1 and #5 together.
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Put two or three drops of super-glue between the wire and the
nger rest. Remember that it must reach the hole in the pickup
ring.
Screw the wheel and glue the self adhesive piece of felt. With it,
the pot won't mar the top if the nger rest is bent excessively.
The following operaons must be done aer the nish has been sanded
and bued.
Reach the thread that passes through the wiring guides and superglue it to the bare end of the single-conductor wire, as shown.
Pull the thread and the wire will pass through the guides.
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Solder the female jack and use a piece of wire to guide it into its
hole, as shown.
Tightening the jack without having access to the guitar inside can
prove impossible. If this happens, you may nd that Frank Ford's
"Jack The Gripper" is the tool to use.
Make the connec5ons and secure the wires with a nylon 5e. Now
you can screw the nger rest and pickup in place.
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strings tune perfectly, then the others will be very close to being
perfect too.
Check if the natural harmonic for the second string in fret 12th is
the same as the ngered note in that same fret. If the tuner (or
your ear) nds that the ngered note is higher than the harmonic,
the bridge will have to be moved closer to the tailpiece. Otherwise, move it further away from the tailpiece.
Check the same for the &h string, but this 5me dont move the
whole bridge, as you must not modify its posi/on for the second
string.
Pickup height
Humbuckers can be placed between ample distance margins rela5ve to the strings. A general rule for neck pickups says that there
must be a distance of around 3/32" (2.5 mm) from the bo6om of
the strings to the top of the pole pieces when the strings are depressed at the last fret. This must be set with the height screws;
the pole pieces can be adjusted individually, but this should be
done only if you nd some strings louder than others, for example
if you are using bronze-wound strings.
Truss Rod Nut Cover
When the neck has stabilized, you can install the truss rod nut
cover, which you must have sanded and polished as usual. Place it
centered, touching the nut and, as always, open pilot holes for the
screws.
Congratulaons! By now you probably have a guitar that you are
proud of. Keep it in a good hard case, far from temperature and
humidity extremes and enjoy it for years to come!
Bibliography
There are many books on the subject of guitar making, but I consider that you'll
benet mainly from these four:
- Erlewine, Dan. Guitar Player Repair Guide. Backbeat Books, 2007.
- Benede6o, Robert. Making an Archtop Guitar. Centerstream Publica5ons,,
1996.
- Hoadley, Bruce. Understanding Wood. Taunton Press, 2000.
- Dresdner, Michael. The New Woodnishing Book. Taunton Press, 2000.
The book by Erlewine, a master repairman, will answer a lot of your ques5ons, especially those related to guitar electronics, setup and fre7ng. If you want to complement the book with his DVDs, that will be great too.
The book by Benede6o, a master archtop maker, is the only one describing the
construc5on of an archtop guitar. Again, there is a collec5on of DVDs that is a
great complement to the book.
The two other books are not guitar related, but I strongly recommend them: a
thorough knowledge of wood and nishes is paramount when it comes to avoid
future problems.
Finally, there is a book by Bill Cory, Complete Guide to Building Kit Acous/c Guitars,
available at www.KitGuitarManuals.com both in printed and e-book forms. It deals
with at-top acous5c guitars, but you'll nd a lot of helpful informa5on in it.
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