Saturday, January 21, 2012
We start the real thing
So I have begun the Weiss. I broke out the bender and mold this morning, cleaned off all the mahogany dust and took out some "practice" mahogany. Here is the first try. Not bad. The waist is a pretty sharp bend and the pipe may be a bit to large a diameter. I may set up a torch based pipe to tighten it up.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Back on track
Well, I've built four and sold three cigar box ukulele's!!!! The last of the herd is hanging in the local music store, House of Musical Traditions. With my profits (hahaha), I've bought a mahogany weissenborn set, so its off to the races. Should be here any day. Stay tuned.
Thursday, June 9, 2011
So, I am long term distracted (at least for a month or so). Above is my jig for drilling the hole for a threaded insert into the neck blank.
I showed the finished ukuklele to the owner House of Musical Traditions, a local purveyor of cool instruments of all sorts. He wanted to sell them if I made more (some of the staff wanted the "prototype" on the spot.). I demurred, being it was my first attempt with several flaws. So I am making two more for his display.
The near one is another Romeo Y Julieta Box, but all red and a little deeper. It will sport a solid catalpa top like the prototype, a three piece mahogany/maple/mahogany bolt-on neck, rosewood fretboard (1/4" this time, so with side dot markers as well), saddle and headstock veneer. The far one is a Padron Delicias box with the original plywood top. The owner of HMT wanted a "funkier" model to see if they'd sell. It will have a two piece mahogany bolt-on neck(same source as the prototype), no headstock veneer, all else the same. As the top is bit thick, I expect this one will be quieter. Might get a piezoelectric pickup once I finish stringing it up and testing its tone. The glue on the bookmatched catalpa top is dying as I write. More later
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Box
So onward. Used a "tone bar" approach to bracing. Glued on as two rectangular pieces of scrap maple and then shaped with chisel and my Stanley #100. Titebond II all around. Here's where we are now.
Fretboard tonight. I decided on the "mezzo soprano" scale (14 1/8"). Concert (15") a bit too long and Soprano (13") a bit too short.
Monday, February 28, 2011
The Cigar Box Ukulele Distraction
Adult ADD is a terrible thing. I started this ukulele last summer after looking at Kathy Matsushita's web site and finding I had extra mahogany and some cigar boxes on hand. Kathy has a nice cigar box build described. Above is the neck blank according to her process. I am making this a concert scale uke (14" scale). The box is a Romeo Y Julieta box, 8" long. It sat till last weekend when I made the catalpa top. I had bought a piece of 1/8" rosewood and a rosewood "pen set" at Woodcraft. The latter is perfect for two bridges the former for two fretboards. I took the bottom off the box and added a mahogany heel block, mahogany reinforcements the the corners and maple strips for gluing surfaces. I scraped away the paper on all gluing surfaces.
Here's the neck with the "insert" in place and rough carved. The Safe-T-Planer is great for thinning the peghead.
More distractions as they happen.
Friday, February 25, 2011
Practice, practice
I decided that trying my first bookmatched top with 40" long seam was heroic at best, so I thought I'd start out smaller. I had bought a large piece of "rescue" catalpa from my friends at Community Forklift when the bandsaw was new and tried my hand at resawing. I got some clean, narrow pieces, but the saw wasn't tuned up enough to cut 10" wide tops and bottoms from it. I put the booked matches 1/4" sheets aside as the had lots of pin knots as well.
I got them out yesterday and found a clean section long enough to be the top for a cigar box instrument. I had cut a couple of ukulele necks from mahogany left over from the mooncake mandoline project. I purchased a section of thick counter top of Communtiy Forklift to be the auxiliary table for use my Safe-T-planer on the drill press.
Its dead flat and real rigid. I jointed the 1/4" plates using a simple shooting board and plane, then 150 grit sandpaper sitting on top of my (you guessed it) Community Forklift granite counter top. They were then "tented" over a paintstick and the edges trapped between some finishing nails driven into a piece of flat scrap plywood. Tightbond II for the center seam, and a couple of dead lead acid batteries to hold the seam down while drying. I then thicknessed the top on the Safe-T-planar to 0.100".
The picture above is after light sanding with 150 grit to remove most of the mill marks (I was getting late for work) and then some mineral spirits to look at the figuring. The wood is a beautiful butterscotch color. a mahogany grain structure, and a lovely tap tone. I'm getting there!!
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