Building My Own Guitar - Part 2

avatar
(Edited)

Here's part two of my partsocaster build. See part one here. https://steemit.com/music/@sketch.and.jam/building-my-own-guitar-part-1-uzh47t4b

Now its time for wiring the pickups to the main 5-way switch. I got a toneshaper solderless kit that allows for a more clear signal to go to the amp without worrying about messy solder. Simple strip the ends of the wires on the pickups and plug them into the green part on the left side. The letters N, M and B stand for neck, middle and bridge pickup. GD stands for ground. The green connectors on the right go to the input jack. The little white switches in the middle can be configured to rewire your pickups in series, parallel, vintage or modern wiring depending on what combo of switches you turn on and off. The big white plugs go to the knobs.

Here is the old wiring, i just snipped off the wires to the old controls and plugged them into the new controls. I had to do a bit of research to figure out what color wire does what. Red and orange wires bring the signal to the controls, the green is the ground wire.

Now everything is wired to the new controls. You just have to turn a tiny little screw to clamp down the pickup wire into the controls.

Next I finished attaching the tuners to the neck. These tuners also had to have little joles drilled in back to adhere them in place. I used my trusty dremmel to predrill the holes and then used a tiny screwdriver to put each screw in by hand.

Next the neck and body need to be predrilled. I lined them up first then used my dremmel and an appropriate sized bit to predrill the holes in alignment with the neck.

I made little marks in the back of the neck first before drilling to the right depth. You really need to keep the drill straight and put the dremmel on a low speed and slowly proceed. A messup here could ruin the neck forever :-(

Fortunately the neck went on perfectly and fit perfectly so there was no need for tricky carving or shimming. Now its time to intonate the bridge. Unfortunately I skipped a few picture steps like attaching the bridge and springs as I was getting excited at the guitar being close to playable.

I setup the bridge to rest on the body for better tuning stability. Someday after I put on the wooden pickguard I might set the bridge to float but that tends to cause tuning stability problems on these 6 screw bridges.

Here it is all finished up. All the puckups work and the action and intonation is good. I even did a few divebombs on the tremelo and it stayed in tune.

I'll live with this setup for a while before swapping the white pickguard out with a wooden pickguard. I may give the body some more sanding and a truoil finish next.
Here's a sound sample right after I finished puttong it together. https://youtu.be/0_MDdHptvmM

Posted using Partiko Android



0
0
0.000
16 comments
avatar

You've been chosen to be featured in @creativecoin's 🔥DAILY BURN🔥 post!

This is so thorough! These are the types of posts that make me sad payout happens after 7 days and then it suddenly has no value. 😭 I still have hopes we'll figure all this out.
Thanks for sharing this!
😍@carrieallen

0
0
0.000
avatar

That looks like it plays well. It sounds good!

0
0
0.000
avatar

I'm wavering on a floating bridge setup or not. Right now it is pinned to the back of the body so the tremelo only bends foward to keep it in tune better. But it kind of limits the way the tremelo sounds. The busted lace sensor pickups were a good deal they are pretty expensive on their own but the broken wiring saved me 50% off now they are finally working.

Posted using Partiko Android

0
0
0.000
avatar

I'd like to try one of those lace sensor pickups in my Squire Strat, gotta be better for noise than the standard single coils...
My Strat doesn't stay in tune very well with the tremolo being active. I upgraded it to 5 springs from the 3 that it had when I got it and that helps, but not entirely. I plan on putting a wood block in the tremolo slot to stop it from moving. I don't use it anyway.

0
0
0.000
avatar

The wood blocking method works i did that for an old squire i gave away a while back. There used to be a hard tail bridge that would replace a strat tremelo without any modification. The guy who sold them went out of business though. Lace sensor is a nice pickup they even have cigar box guitar pickups. I have to make one of those someday.

Posted using Partiko Android

0
0
0.000
avatar

Yeah, a cigar box guitar would be a cool project. :-)

0
0
0.000
avatar

Your post has been curated by the bitcoin myk project. Tokens are available for this account you can trade for steem at: https://steem-engine.com/. Join our curation priority list to earn more tokens by registering at:

http://www.bitcoinmyk.com/register/

Visit our discord at: https://discordapp.com/channels/523971711733858364/523971711733858366

Bitcoin MYK
admin
Register - Bitcoin MYK
This post earned 250 BTCMYK

image.png

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you for using the #diy tag. This post has been manually rewarded with BUILD tokens in the form of an upvote with our @build-it.curator account. You can buy, stake, and exchange our "BUILD" tokens for steem on steem engine and Steem Leo's exchange

Build-it is a central hub for DIY and How-To projects. It's an opportunity to find and share the latest in DIY, and How-To tutorials. The recommended tags required when creating a DIY article are #diy, #build-it. #how-to, or #doityourself.

Chat with us on our discord and telegram channels Discord, Telegram. Are we adding value ? your witness vote will be appreciated! Click here to vote

0
0
0.000