Yes. Yes, I am a liar.
So, I decided to start working on the Les Paul again after a loooooooong hiatus.
I got myself all psyched up to get my hands dirty fixing the neck and neck pocket. This morning I took the body and neck down from the fridge, took one look at it and decided, "I'm not working on the neck pocket today. " Even though I haven't touched this project in 18 months - I'm going to 'switch gears' and work on the neck.
Okay - here we go...
I had alluded to the fact that I was going to make some drastic changes to the neck in a previous post. Here's where we dig into that process. My plan is to take the existing neck that I bought from Guitarfetish and add the following:
- A headstock veneer to match the body
- Binding all around the neck
- Replace the existing diamond inlays with standard Les paul 'block' inlays
- Install an Irish coin inlay (most likely a 1 penny piece) in the headstock
If you've been following along - I finished the headstock veneer a while back.
Today we'll look at how to do the binding around the neck.
The binding was going to be a mixture of easy and hard. Most of the binding was going to be set in straight runs (with few curves) but I wasn't sure how I was going to route the channel for the binding as I don't own a router table. This kind of work is hard to do freehand with a router as the neck is curved on both sides and tapered to boot.
After a quick trip to google - it became clear that I had all the necessary parts to build my own primitive router table. So, first up: build a router table.
Kinda looks like a reject from 'The Lego Movie.' |
Make sure to mark off where the holes go to attach the board to the router and start drilling holes. I made a one inch hole in the middle of a sheet of particle board for any router bits to fit through and drilled four 1/8 inch holes for the mounting screws. I also used a 1/4 inch forstner bit to countersink the screws so that they don't bump into the workpiece.
Once the holes are all drilled - screw the router base onto the bottom of the board, turn the board upside down, mount it to something (I used a black and decker workmate bench), and adjust the height of the router bit until it pokes through the hole. Voila!
For any of the more seasoned luthiers/woodworkers out there - this is a temporary router table. I'm aware that this won't last (particle board warps). But it got the job done and I didn't have to drop $300 at Rockler.
Anywho! This particular router bit is larger than the ball bearing on the top - so the ball bearing runs along the work piece and the blade cuts deeper leaving a channel that I can use to install the binding around the neck.
Once the holes are all drilled - screw the router base onto the bottom of the board, turn the board upside down, mount it to something (I used a black and decker workmate bench), and adjust the height of the router bit until it pokes through the hole. Voila!
It took almost as long to write this description as it took to make the thing itself. |
For any of the more seasoned luthiers/woodworkers out there - this is a temporary router table. I'm aware that this won't last (particle board warps). But it got the job done and I didn't have to drop $300 at Rockler.
Anywho! This particular router bit is larger than the ball bearing on the top - so the ball bearing runs along the work piece and the blade cuts deeper leaving a channel that I can use to install the binding around the neck.
What? Me worry? |
As the last several post about binding have proven - I have no idea what I'm doing! So, we'll see how this goes. But for now - there is a channel for binding, I have already purchased neck binding, and there's no legal or ethical reason why I can't just bind this sucker at any given moment.
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