Paul Wolfe wrote:Absolutely LOVE the neck in lays!
Thanks Paul! I almost wasn't going to put any inlay at all on the fingerboard, but decided at the last moment to do something really subtle with paua shell. This would be an ideal beginner's inlay if you'd like to do something like this on the guitar you want to build.
the crush wrote:did you build the scorpions tribute guitar its really nice i love the feel of the oiled necks i think you have posted about my RR POLKA DOT i am having built i have posted pix i wanted the unfinished nect for my V but changed my mind on but that is a sweet looking guitar about how much to have you build a custom v guitar roughley thanks
Thank you! And yes, I just finished construction on it last week. I really prefer the feel of an oiled neck too, big time! But I think I"d still want something like a PDV to have the paint job on the neck too. Yours was the blue PDV, right? That thing is so sweet!!
I'm not really setup to go into business with it... my little 8x10 shop is not insulated or heated, and it can get down to as much as -30°C (-22°F) in the winter, and I don't have a spray booth and rented out time in a local sign shop to do that. They're closed after work and weekends, so I have to arrange it during my vacation time. I haven't done any serious number crunching on it, but it would be in the typical range of $2-3K to be worthwhile. Some sort of "production model" would no doubt bring down the cost, especially if I got setup with a CNC machine. My skills would need to be developed more to start demanding such a professional rate too, which I don't feel are there yet. I only had a couple years experience at it 20 years ago, quit the trade, then started up again a year ago for fun. I'd only made a couple electrics with bolt-on necks before, and acoustic, a few dulcimers and a couple dozen flat-top mandolins, as well as some repair work at the time. This is my first set neck construction.
sytharnia wrote:that's awesome.....its just a shame you can't see thru the silver/grey to see the flame on that side
Thanks!! There actually isn't any flame maple on the left side, but just some inexpensive plain maple I scored from a local cabinet maker. I had thought about laminating the whole top with flame maple and doing what you suggested, but thought it would be too small and few areas to bother, and just went for solid paint scheme on that half instead. The flame maple actually looks quite darker and and more black in real life, but the grain does pop out nicely like that when it hits the light on the right angle.
This is my first time doing a trans finish, and it turned out even better than I had hoped. I just rubbed the dye (Stew Mac's ColorTone Liquid Stains, awesome stuff!) mixed with Isopropyl alcohol into the wood, and didn't spray any mixed with the clear coats at all. I think some of the most beautiful sunbursts I've seen were only rubbed into the wood rather than sprayed on.