I'm a long time Hammond organ player and obsessed tonewheeler. I own a 1964 Hammond A100 and Leslie 147, Hammond XK3 clone wheel with the Neo Ventilator, various synths including the Kawai K5000, Roland XV5050, Access Virus C, Moog Taurus 2 and a few other minor 80s or 90s or 00's synths.
So by now you're all wondering what the hell is a keys player doing on a forum of a DIY guitar builder/supplier?
Glad you asked. The old A100 is a valve driven, 50+ years old and needs regular maintenance and TLC. She is probably one of the top 5 Hammonds left in Australia.
Confused? Well, there is method to my madness.
To maintain a near pristine vintage beast like my A100, I need more detailed understanding of how valve amps/preamps work. So I've built a few kits - RIAA preamp and headphone amps, but now I need to migrate to the big time. Build a valve amp from scratch.
So looking around online its either a stereo amp or guitar amp. Guitar is easier. Single channel, no preamp and so on.
So I decided to build an electric guitar. After looking around online I came upon PittBull Guitars, crunched some numbers compared to buying the kit in bits and pieces and saw their LP-1S kit. I'm a Jeff Beck fan and I work in the timber industry so I was sold. That spalted veneer is gold. Price worked out too if you were to buy the components independently.
The kit arrived yesterday, with the Dingotone Natural finish kit. Right on time.
Today I've sanded it back to 800 grit and applied the "stain". No pigment so it hasn't changed the colour but wow, the timber ventures stand out. This kit will look great if I do the rest carefully.
Had to carefully grind back a couple of frets that were higher than the others but the Dremel made light work of that.
It's now hanging in two pieces in the garage. Will post photos when done..