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#1
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Have a look at Matthew Tucker's French Bass restoration thread-that's what good repair looks like. Notice the lack of glue globs, the obsessive neatness of the cleat placement and trimming, etc. His post is a textbook on how to do it right, as is the "restoration" section on his website.
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#2
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I have several restoration photos on my website of some famous instruments in restoration. Not a blow by blow but a gook look inside some very expensive basses, $50-$150k grade.
Matthew's work looks very nice but the more you see, the more you learn from. These two links here are master grade basses restored by one of the best that does work for all of the major New York Orchestras and 100k basses are common in this shop daily. One, and Two. I have 100s of restoration photos in my files from other master grade basses of mine and other basses worked on as well but I generally keep them private as they would scare most players. Like seeing a body opened up and then a year later the guy jogging. Once when having a root c**** and fitting at the dentist I had to take a bathroom break as this was going for hours. The dentist said "DON'T look in the Mirror!!" After washing my hands I looked up.. ![]() ![]() .. Now I knew why he said that.. Post restoration photos are mush prettier to look at unless your are an experienced Emergency room attendee.. ![]() |
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#3
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Quote:
PS I have a good Idea of what to do by now, I am planning on practicing the procedure before I get to that bass Last edited by Ruben E garcia; 12-03-2010 at 02:41 PM. |
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#4
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If you can make your work as good and neat as that, you are doing the best possible. Sloppy work hurts the value and may need to be re-done as well, sooner than later.
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#5
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So I didnt have super long clamps that can reach deep into the top, so
I used Rare earth magnets.... I did work perfectly ![]() All the cleats, square shape at 45% Grain angle ![]() Chisel down (super sharp chisels ), Scraped and Sanded....![]() Final Result... They look good to me... I dont know about you guys ![]() ![]() Couple notes.... I spoke to one of the local luthiers and he said that the old crack by the sound post looks sound... he recommended to ad a cleat in the north section of the crack and not to do a inlay patch... at least for now.... as for the lost of wood on the edges he suggest that an easy way to fix it is to use Wood epoxy.... I dont know anything about wood epoxy, sound scare sense ones the epoxy sets, I dont think I will be able to get it out in the case of a mistake.... could I use Hide glue for it, hummm...... i dont know if Hide G will build up or if it may react when I glue the top back????? ... it need to study the case in deep |
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#6
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![]() It needs a sound post patch and the edges at least repaired with wood if not a full around half edging. I don't know who this guy is but it sounds like he can kill a good bass easily with his ideas.. NEVER Epoxy. ![]() Never open up a bass and do half the work to 'see' it it holds. Do the proper sound post patch as it does need it. |
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#7
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Ok Ken I see... I undestand.... 1) No epoxy... I wasnt really sure about that at all... but I wanted some feedback from you... 2) Now It needs a sound post patch... I will do it, I will take your advise and do one... now so I get the whole point of your comment... when I face with an sound post crack.. it needs a patch even is the crack is not open... so I think the guy who performed the last repair... that it looks very good by the way... should have done a sound post patch before closing this bass? may the the customer didnt want to pay for that repair.. I being told that is $1000 for a patch... Jesus that a little too much for that I can see why someone would say no to that .... well like a said that's for your advise sound post patch is.... |
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#8
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Thank you Wayne I'll look into it... ![]() Last edited by Ruben E garcia; 01-16-2011 at 06:13 PM. |
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#9
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http://www.stringrepair.com/images/d...During_110.JPG http://www.stringrepair.com/images/db3/ff6.JPG |
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#10
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