One year later...
Les Paul Florentine Build
Monday, 16 January 2017
Sunday, 4 January 2015
...and the final page!
Finally after eight months the guitar has gone to her new owner, my brother. Not much to write on this one!
Here he is unwrapping it...
Opening the box...
Lifting it out...
A quick strum...
Closer inspection...
Showing it off...
"What a guitar but no pick? What kind of half-assed job is this!"
At last having a play...
And then later, a facebook comment, which I think says it all
Thursday, 1 January 2015
Getting ready to go to its new home.
Well after lots of tweaking and thorough testing I've blagged an old guitar box from a local music shop and packaged her away.
Here she is next to my first build project
In her well padded box ready for the journey across country to her new home with my brother.
Last bit of padding before I seal the box.
Tuesday, 9 December 2014
All done!
Well after quite a few months of work, and some big learning curves the guitar is now complete!
It has quite heavy strings on it to bring out the acoustics and it works well. It is, as you would expect, much louder acoustically than a solid body guitar and amplified it has some wonderful warm and or bright classic tones despite being relatively cheap (£17 each or £30 for a pair) Vanson toaster PAF style pick ups - The neck is a '57 spec alnico II, and the bridge is '59 spec alnico IV with 0.022uF polypro capacitors and they are wired independent so you can blend them better when both pick ups are selected.
All in all it has been a fab project built with only a few basic hand/power tools and it proves that if you're willing to give it ago, anyone with a bit of enthusiasm and patience can build a fab instrument!
Here's a video a quick video going through the various pick up selections both clean and dirty. Bear in mind that it was filmed on a phone so is not massively representative of the actual tone. My playing, like my building, is more enthusiastic than good so that doesn't really help either...
Anyway I hope you've enjoyed this blog, feel free to leave any comments and I can't wait to start my next project! :-)
Monday, 1 December 2014
Nearly there...
Okay, it's all wired up. I pre-wired it using this ply template which I used on my previous kit builds. I had hoped to fit push/pull pots on this project too. The pick ups are 4 wire ones so I could have had split coil or series/parallel switches on them. However I couldn't fit them into the acoustic chamber with the top glued down so I had to go for the basic standard wiring.
I then carefully fed the controls into the body through the bridge pickup cavity. It was certainly fiddly but not as bad as I was expecting. It only took about 10 minutes using a long screw driver through the jack socket hole and a pair of angled needle nose pliers through the f-hole. The wire you can see in the f-hole got tucked up out of sight against the body using double sided tape.
I then carefully fed the controls into the body through the bridge pickup cavity. It was certainly fiddly but not as bad as I was expecting. It only took about 10 minutes using a long screw driver through the jack socket hole and a pair of angled needle nose pliers through the f-hole. The wire you can see in the f-hole got tucked up out of sight against the body using double sided tape.
I got the action all set up nicely and playing well but then BOLLOCKS #2 occurred... The top E string kept jumping out of it's groove on the bridge. On closer inspection it appeared that I hadn't quite lined up the trapeze tail properly. I ended up having to carefully drill out the screw holes, fill them with dowels, fix the paintwork, and then carefully re-lined up the tail. Once this was done the problems was sorted and it plays really well! The paintwork is a bit patchy at repair site but it's well out of sight unless you specifically look for it.
Saturday, 22 November 2014
Putting it all together...
Well that's the neck bolted on and the locking strap hooks fitted
Bridge and tail, yeah I signed the pickup cavity, you never know I might be famous one day...
Strings are on and the nut height tweaked, although there is one slight problem...
BOLLOCKS!!!! The neck socket is too deep, I'd like to blame the issues I had with my router but I can't really, at the end of the day I measured it out wrong. I think the mistake I made was in the blending of styles. I measured the socket to look like it does on my Les Paul with the finger board sitting on the body. However the bolt on socket style I actually copied off my Yamaha where the finger board sits above the body. Ah well live and learn and it's not a complete loss as I can fix it!
Using some of the sound board off cut I made a piece to go under the neck that follows the contours of the body thus lifting it up a perfect amount. I thought about painting it to match the body but thought that given the amount work involved in blending the colour on the body it might look patchy whereas leaving it natural makes it look deliberate. I sealed it with the matt lacquer before fitting it.
*edit 21/11/2015* I have since found out that I didn't actually route the neck socket too deep. In my inexperience I didn't account for the fact that a tune-o-matic style bridge is much taller than the Yamaha RMPro2 bridge, that and the lack of carving on the top.
Location:
Manchester, UK
Saturday, 15 November 2014
Finishing the headstock and neck
As this is a wedding present I made their wedding date the serial number
Using a dremel hobby drill I engraved their names into the maple in an American diner font. It's a little shaky but not bad considering I did it free hand
And then carefully, with a fine brush I painted in some chrome paint. It looks more like silver but it still pretty against the red background.
Next job is to cut the bone nut that came with neck. I used a pencil sliced through the middle and run over the frets to work out the string slot height. I also leveled the frets with an oil stone and re-crowned them with a needle file.
For love nor money I couldn't find a simple chrome truss rod plate so I bought a small off cut of mirror finished stainless steel off eBay.
30 minutes of playing with hacksaw, file and drill and hey presto - one shiny truss rod cover!
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