How little faith you have in the young man! I'm sure he will get those pick ups blaring at 11!!Quote from dingobass on March 23, 2013, 19:35
Hi all,
You gotta love the Pest's dedication to shielding.... this will be the quietest LP in history!![]()
How little faith you have in the young man! I'm sure he will get those pick ups blaring at 11!!Quote from dingobass on March 23, 2013, 19:35
Hi all,
You gotta love the Pest's dedication to shielding.... this will be the quietest LP in history!![]()
Gavmeister
I am sure he will, but when the amp stops blasting the Axe won't have any hums or buzzez!Quote from Gavin1393 on March 23, 2013, 22:22
How little faith you have in the young man! I'm sure he will get those pick ups blaring at 11!!Quote from dingobass on March 23, 2013, 19:35
Hi all,
You gotta love the Pest's dedication to shielding.... this will be the quietest LP in history!![]()
At let it should be quieter than my strat copy and the Epi!!!Quote from dingobass on March 23, 2013, 19:35
Hi all,
You gotta love the Pest's dedication to shielding.... this will be the quietest LP in history!
Today I did a fair amount of sanding and drilling, and I saw that there are some areas on the sides where glue has embedded itself into the wood, and sanding wont get it out... Ideas anyone??? I was thinking a tiny bit of metho???
Cheers,
Pest
![]()
Nope, metho will at best just spread the glue.....Quote from keloooe on March 24, 2013, 13:32
Today I did a fair amount of sanding and drilling, and I saw that there are some areas on the sides where glue has embedded itself into the wood, and sanding wont get it out... Ideas anyone??? I was thinking a tiny bit of metho???
Cheers,
Pest
![]()
I used a wire brush....but you need to decide what method to use as you dont want to sand through the caps...hate that glue!
Gavmeister
Hmmm... I'll see what a very light steel wooling will do, before lightly rubbing it with a wire brush...Quote from Gavin1393 on March 24, 2013, 13:59
Nope, metho will at best just spread the glue.....Quote from keloooe on March 24, 2013, 13:32
Today I did a fair amount of sanding and drilling, and I saw that there are some areas on the sides where glue has embedded itself into the wood, and sanding wont get it out... Ideas anyone??? I was thinking a tiny bit of metho???
Cheers,
Pest
![]()
I used a wire brush....but you need to decide what method to use as you dont want to sand through the caps...hate that glue!
Any more ideas anyone???
EDIT: Gav, you mean a brush like this?
http://www.bunnings.com.au/OurRange/...f14838/1674032
No, it is a set of three brushes a liitle bigger than a tooth brush but only just.....will set you back about $3! It was the ONLY thing that helped me.
I tried sanding and ended up sanding right through the cap despite being incredibly careful. That's just how thin the cap is at the edges.
I tried metho, turpentine, acetone....(don't try acetone near plastic!) and all it did was spread the glue or perhaps seal the wood so it wouldnt take wudtone over a wider area....so that didnt work.
Tried scrapers, the very best that SMac can offer...it was helpful but had the same issue of sanding through the caps.
A cabinet maker, far more experience than I and a professional when it comes to wood suggested the wire brushes. These scratch the wood enough to allow the wudtone to penetrate and colour the wood rather than allowing the wood to become polished and continue to reject the stain.
Steel wool will only polish the wood and leave you back at square one.
Gavmeister
Thanks bro!!!! It took me a total of 3 hours, maybe more during an evening and a morning, with a lot of cuts to my left fingers...Quote from dingobass on March 24, 2013, 16:04
Oh, and did I mention that you have done a superb job with the shielding.
Looks like a Pro with years of experience did it. Well done young man![]()
I'm happiest with the control cavity, the neatest of all... The pup routs need a little bit more, and the switch cavity and scratchplate need "The Copper Touch"
And Gavin, 2nd brush attempt: http://www.bunnings.com.au/OurRange/...-Bhb3b/6114348