Wound_Up
Active member
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2024
- Messages
- 159
- Reaction score
- 221
Been working on this for a few weeks here and there. I picked up a paulownia Strat body a few weeks ago because I've been wanting to finish a guitar ever since I repaired my Epiphone. So I ordered that body.
Next up was a neck. I attempted to use the neck from my blue Silvertone because I really like it and it fit the pocket perfectly. So I mark the holes to be drilled and drill them out. Turns out that I didn't drill them straight so the screws were binding up and getting HOT. So hot, in fact, that I snapped the head off of one and the rest was stuck in the neck.
My plan was to dig it out and plug the hole like I saw Ted Woodford do to Adam Savage's 70s semi-hollow 335-type guitar. Well I had to order new neck screws and I didn't know what size so I just ordered some from Fender.
The vid of Ted fixing Adams guitar:
Turns out the Silvertone screws are a size or two larger than Fenders. So when the Fender screws got here, I figured "let me try one of these screws in the blocked hole and see what happens". So I drop it in and start turning and THE THING GRABBED AND STARTED TIGHTENING....with 85% of the broken screw still stuck in the neck.
Best I can figure is that since the new screw wasnt as big diameter-wise as the previous one, it had enough movement in the hole that it found fresh wood. I'm guessing it went in at a slight angle and missed the broken screw completely. Whatever the case, the Silvertone is back together and plays GREAT so it's not coming back apart again. Ever. Lol
So then I decide I'll buy a neck. I had a bunch of credit on Amazon so I looked there and found what appeared to be a nice looking baked maple neck with rosewood fretboard, stainless frets, a bone nut, and a Modern D shape, iirc.
The first one they sent looked GREAT! Nice dark rosewood. Flamed maple all up and down the neck. Other than that, it was terrible. The fret ends cut up my hands BAD. There was such a back bow that the notched straightedge looked like a seesaw. The truss rod almost got it flat so I returned it for a replacement.
The 2nd neck is great! 100% usable. Still has flame. Stainless frets. No bone nut. Fret ends are 1000x better. It'll be fantastic once I get done with it.
Most of my pics are too big to post so heres a couple showing flame on the neck and the belly contour that I was working on.



Currently working on the last bit of grain filling the body today. Then I'll seal it with nitro sanding sealer. Once that's done, it'll be getting Sonic Blue nitro paint and then clear. I still have to order the paint and clearcoat. I have sanding sealer already.
I'm just wondering if I should be doing paint on the same day I do sealer? Or do I wait a week and let the sealer harden/cure/whatever, then come back and paint it afterwards?
Anyway. It ought to turn out pretty good. I had run across a few people saying they had issues with the grain filler I'm using. They seem to think it gets dissolved by nitro lacquer but that's not what I'm seeing. I did a test piece yesterday with filler and sealer and everything is exactly where it was before sealing.
The difference being that everybody that's having issues with it seems to have sprayed sealer first, then tried to fill the grain after sealer, which doesn't sound like the right way to do things to me. Logic says fill the grain, then seal it.
That's what I did and I had zero issues while everybody that sealed it first complained about it disappearing and the grain not being filled after shooting the first coat of nitro over it. I guess I don't understand why anyone would seal it first. You're filing the grain up with sealer. No, wonder the grain filler didn't work. It's not made to fill sealer. It's made to fill wood <shrug>
Anyway. I'll update this as I do stuff.
Next up was a neck. I attempted to use the neck from my blue Silvertone because I really like it and it fit the pocket perfectly. So I mark the holes to be drilled and drill them out. Turns out that I didn't drill them straight so the screws were binding up and getting HOT. So hot, in fact, that I snapped the head off of one and the rest was stuck in the neck.
My plan was to dig it out and plug the hole like I saw Ted Woodford do to Adam Savage's 70s semi-hollow 335-type guitar. Well I had to order new neck screws and I didn't know what size so I just ordered some from Fender.
The vid of Ted fixing Adams guitar:
Turns out the Silvertone screws are a size or two larger than Fenders. So when the Fender screws got here, I figured "let me try one of these screws in the blocked hole and see what happens". So I drop it in and start turning and THE THING GRABBED AND STARTED TIGHTENING....with 85% of the broken screw still stuck in the neck.
Best I can figure is that since the new screw wasnt as big diameter-wise as the previous one, it had enough movement in the hole that it found fresh wood. I'm guessing it went in at a slight angle and missed the broken screw completely. Whatever the case, the Silvertone is back together and plays GREAT so it's not coming back apart again. Ever. Lol
So then I decide I'll buy a neck. I had a bunch of credit on Amazon so I looked there and found what appeared to be a nice looking baked maple neck with rosewood fretboard, stainless frets, a bone nut, and a Modern D shape, iirc.
The first one they sent looked GREAT! Nice dark rosewood. Flamed maple all up and down the neck. Other than that, it was terrible. The fret ends cut up my hands BAD. There was such a back bow that the notched straightedge looked like a seesaw. The truss rod almost got it flat so I returned it for a replacement.
The 2nd neck is great! 100% usable. Still has flame. Stainless frets. No bone nut. Fret ends are 1000x better. It'll be fantastic once I get done with it.
Most of my pics are too big to post so heres a couple showing flame on the neck and the belly contour that I was working on.



Currently working on the last bit of grain filling the body today. Then I'll seal it with nitro sanding sealer. Once that's done, it'll be getting Sonic Blue nitro paint and then clear. I still have to order the paint and clearcoat. I have sanding sealer already.
I'm just wondering if I should be doing paint on the same day I do sealer? Or do I wait a week and let the sealer harden/cure/whatever, then come back and paint it afterwards?
Anyway. It ought to turn out pretty good. I had run across a few people saying they had issues with the grain filler I'm using. They seem to think it gets dissolved by nitro lacquer but that's not what I'm seeing. I did a test piece yesterday with filler and sealer and everything is exactly where it was before sealing.
The difference being that everybody that's having issues with it seems to have sprayed sealer first, then tried to fill the grain after sealer, which doesn't sound like the right way to do things to me. Logic says fill the grain, then seal it.
That's what I did and I had zero issues while everybody that sealed it first complained about it disappearing and the grain not being filled after shooting the first coat of nitro over it. I guess I don't understand why anyone would seal it first. You're filing the grain up with sealer. No, wonder the grain filler didn't work. It's not made to fill sealer. It's made to fill wood <shrug>
Anyway. I'll update this as I do stuff.
Last edited: