A NEAT TREAT

Exceptional restoration is in the details

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epitreture
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by epitreture »

Fantastic job, Paul! Can't wait to see it with the gold guards.
If there isn't a 12 string Rickenbacker playing at my funeral, I'm leaving.
brycycle
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by brycycle »

godber wrote:Blimey that's flash. A bobby dazzler.
took the words right out of my gob.
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beatlefreak
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by beatlefreak »

Nice work, Paul. But I'm not sure I'd like playing a checkerboard bound neck.
Ka is a wheel.
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cmuk
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by cmuk »

Looks awesome! Interestingly (or maybe not) this is probably one of the few inlayed (as opposed to dot marker) fretboards to have a 24th fret inlay, due to the conversion of the double dot.

Fantastic craftsmanship.
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doctorwho
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by doctorwho »

When I read the start of the thread, my first thought was, "it may be a bit over the top", but the end product is absolutely beautiful! Can't wait to see the full-view picture.
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
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andywatts
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by andywatts »

Thanks again Paul! I'm waiting anxiously for the UPS man to arrive!
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gareth
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by gareth »

Ha. I was wondering how to refinish a fingerboard to FWMOP. I have a dremel too. What could possibly go wrong ?
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longhouse
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by longhouse »

Beauty!

Can't wait to see the whole thing.
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collin
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by collin »

jingle_jangle wrote:Bubinga is one of the species of tropical hardwoods that gets darker upon exposure to UV radiation. There are a few species that get very dark after a few months of sunlight; padauk is one of the most dramatic shifters, beginning when first milled as a brilliant red-brown almost exactly the color of this page header and aging to a color very much like walnut.
Looking at the fretboard wood, it looks pretty similar to 60's Rics.

I've always been confused by this----were your average "64-'68 era Rickenbacker fretboards made of Bubinga or Paduak? I've heard the term "African Rosewood" kicked around too, but I thought it was the same thing as Bubinga.

In any case---that is a stellar looking fretboard, my man. 8)
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jingle_jangle
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by jingle_jangle »

I'm sure that '64-68 were not padauk, and I'm sure early Capris were.
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collin
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by collin »

So 64-68's would have been some type of Rosewood or even Bubinga?

I don't know much about wood varieties, but I know most of these woods are kinda similar to the untrained eye (which sums me up!) :)
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jingle_jangle
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by jingle_jangle »

collin wrote:So 64-68's would have been some type of Rosewood or even Bubinga?

I don't know much about wood varieties, but I know most of these woods are kinda similar to the untrained eye (which sums me up!) :)
The ones I've worked on and own all look like bubinga.

This type of nomenclature, however, is still too vague. Woods commonly called "Bubinga" are all of the genus Guibuortia, and are native to Africa.

G. arnoldiana, g. demeusae, g. pellegriniana, and g. tessmanii
are all commonly termed "bubinga" and visual differences are minor.

G. ehie is what we know as shedua.

G. collissoana and g. coleosperma are what we call African Rosewood.

I'm never sure of anything except that I buy g. arnoldiana for fretboards (at least that's what the lumber guy says he sells me). I don't see any difference between this and shedua, either. Both air-dry to tannish red and surface to pinkish tan. Varnishing darkens both a bit and brings out the grain; UV darkens both more and seems to yellow them a bit, too.

Padauk, however, is from an entirely different genus (pterocarpus) and is a brilliant deep red with brown streaks, and when freshly-varnished is very deep maroon with an orange tinge--blood orange in color I'd say. Its full Latin name is pterocarpus soyauxii.

One day of strong UV exposure will brown it, and a week will turn it to walnut brown on the surface. Milling it restores the red tones. It is used for dyes and medicines--its pigment is alcohol-soluble. If you ever smell it, you'll note a strong tropical herbal scent. It is quite oily, and the oil will nourish tropical fungal growths, too.
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collin
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by collin »

Very cool, thanks for the info Paul! I have always wondered the differences between the two main types.
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winston
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by winston »

I am waiting for a full body pic of the guitar so I can fully appreciate this delicate but bold nuance. I suspect that it will be very appealing overall, but I would really like to see what that neck binding looks like on a FG instrument. I think it would be the bees knees.
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rickenbrother
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Re: A NEAT TREAT

Post by rickenbrother »

I like the way that looks!
JETGLO should officially be renamed JETGLO ROCKS! :-)
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