I took just a block of wood, radius cauge and plastic padding. I made a curve on the wood with cauge. Then I used this block to sand the radius block. Took few minutes and it's perfect.
Thank you for your video. I am a ukulele builder who also makes most of my jigs, including radius dishes, bending irons, binding cutting jigs, etc. I look forward to more of your videos.
Man, I am so glad I tripped across your video’s!! I thought I was the only one that has to figure out a way to not spend all that money on tools! Build almost anything, but I have brain lock a lot. I’ll subscribe so you can help me out of those locked up times lol !! keep it up. We appreciate you.
Hi KineticNidalee, Thank you for the compliment. To be honest putting a router on a pendulum isn’t my invention. This is my take on an already existing idea with a couple of improvements I didn’t see on other designs.
You can also put the fretboard on a pendulum, pass it across a cutter or a sander, with adjustability at both ends of the pendulum, to create all the common radii, or a compound radius.
Thank you for this video - very helpful. I had thought about that kind of jig for making necks with different radii (radiuses?) but I just couldn't warp my head around it. Yours makes so much sense. Thanks again.
Hi Uriel, Yeah a regular Dremel might be not powerful enough. I use the Dremel Trio which is just powerful enough for the job, but I on't know if they make it anymore. Good to hear you found a solution and the jig is working for you.
Thank you for making the video. Smart solution well executed, but for most ppl not very practical. Properly planing the block is a pro job and requires a rather expensive plane. if you buying the block pre-planed you might just as well buy an sanding block. Kudos anyway!
hi this is a really good video it inspired me so much, i wanna make the same machine, can you please give more details about it, i really like the way that you calculate the radius, can you show me how? i think that the guitar that i have to fix is a 9.5, you know how to calculate the radius of a guitar without tools to?
I’ve benefited greatly from your videos. This will be my next project. What part of the Netherlands are you in? I have family in Groningen. Koning’s and Rabbeljee’s also veenstra’s. I’m located in Canada. Thanks for the informative videos.
Love it thanks for the video! About to start my first couple builds, and I hate buying tools or jigs when I can make them out of scraps. Have you thought of using a cove style bit on the router instead? I would think the flat bit would leave more track marks than a rounded point? Would require a ton more passes though, so I'm only speculating.
Great job on that but wouldn't using a more powerful router like a Colt trim router let you use bigger bits and speed up the process? I dig what you did here just a suggestion, keep up the great work!
I’m having trouble figuring out your Dremel jig for making the radiusing blocks. Can you explain how you made the jig please. Thank you for any help you can provide.
Hi Dani, Yes, you can use any type of router you like. As long as the principle of a pendulum is maintained to get the radius you're after. One thing to keep in mind is that a larger heavy router may require a very heavy and stable construction.
ja ik bedenk me altijd dit, hoeveel gaat een mal me tijd kosten om te maken, hoeveel lol ga ik er aan beleven om die mal te maken, hoeveel tijd kost het me om het product te maken, en dan eindig ik vaak door gewoon de tool te kopen die ik nodig heb, en hoeveel die kosten. In dit geval zijn er op Rall guitars goed betaalbare schuurblokken à 50cm. Zo zag ik ook een video van iemand die een index liniaal maakte voor het zagen van fretslots, tja, het zou me meer dan 1 uur tijd kosten om zoiets te maken, en ik ga daar niet van genieten. Dus ik koop die gewoon, met cnc precisie. Laatst ''moest'' ik een jig maken voor een liplas, zodat ie echt goed vlak was.
The router jig has a higher mount point for the pendulum. You use that and get a longer swing on the arm, resulting in a wider arc. For a 16" radius, make sure the end of the router bit is 16" from the swivel point of the pendulum, and use the height adjustment he noted to make sure the piece is at the right cut depth.
The router is mounted in such a way that it is X inches away from the fretboard (in this case, 12 inches away), so as it swings back and forth in a pendulum-like motion it carves away wood in that arc, simulating a 12" radius. Hope that makes sense!
I took just a block of wood, radius cauge and plastic padding. I made a curve on the wood with cauge. Then I used this block to sand the radius block. Took few minutes and it's perfect.
Thank you for your video. I am a ukulele builder who also makes most of my jigs, including radius dishes, bending irons, binding cutting jigs, etc. I look forward to more of your videos.
By far the most useful and informational TH-cam guitar building channel.
Man, I am so glad I tripped across your video’s!! I thought I was the only one that has to figure out a way to not spend all that money on tools! Build almost anything, but I have brain lock a lot. I’ll subscribe so you can help me out of those locked up times lol !! keep it up. We appreciate you.
Love this guy's TH-cam channel
the best idea I saw on the subject till now, thank you!
Fantastic video, great idea putting the dremel on a pendulum!
Hi KineticNidalee,
Thank you for the compliment.
To be honest putting a router on a pendulum isn’t my invention. This is my take on an already existing idea with a couple of improvements I didn’t see on other designs.
You can also put the fretboard on a pendulum, pass it across a cutter or a sander, with adjustability at both ends of the pendulum, to create all the common radii, or a compound radius.
Thank you for this video - very helpful. I had thought about that kind of jig for making necks with different radii (radiuses?) but I just couldn't warp my head around it. Yours makes so much sense. Thanks again.
Made one using a Dremel, not powerful enough. It worked, but took too long. Bought a $30 router at harbor freight and upgraded the jig, works great!
Hi Uriel,
Yeah a regular Dremel might be not powerful enough. I use the Dremel Trio which is just powerful enough for the job, but I on't know if they make it anymore.
Good to hear you found a solution and the jig is working for you.
All right you save me lot
Now I calculate the radius center to the router bit and make other radius I appreciate this inf and blessings bro here my 👍
Thank you for making the video. Smart solution well executed, but for most ppl not very practical. Properly planing the block is a pro job and requires a rather expensive plane. if you buying the block pre-planed you might just as well buy an sanding block. Kudos anyway!
Thanks a lot!!! I just think about it (how to make a radius block) and saw you! Great job!
Great knowledge to learn I need #12 block on a build I'm working on
Hi Kevin,
I'm glad you found some useful information in one of my videos.
Great. Very well done. Way better than paying $180 at certain well known Luthier supply shop.
Great idea for the jig.
I'll be making one soon. Great tool tip.
Hi Greg.
Your welcome! Have fun making your own!
cool stuff, nice and simple
Nice idea-radiusing is my nemesis-thanks for this video!
Hey ChrisK,
Thank you very much and you're welcome!
Wow!! Awesome work
Thanks, great idear!
Excellent, will definitely give this a try 👌
Hi Benjamin,
Thank you and good luck!
Nice. And just like you've pointed out, the specialized tools are not even always available in sizes (in this case the length) that we actually need.
Very clever!
I learn so much here
hi this is a really good video it inspired me so much, i wanna make the same machine, can you please give more details about it, i really like the way that you calculate the radius, can you show me how? i think that the guitar that i have to fix is a 9.5, you know how to calculate the radius of a guitar without tools to?
maybe you can make a video on a step by step how to make that jig....thanks
Thanks. Very useful
I made 9's & 10s guitar nut files, a crowning file, fret dressing file, & a sanding beam.
Pls make video for the jig.
That is a very good method
I’ve benefited greatly from your videos. This will be my next project. What part of the Netherlands are you in? I have family in Groningen. Koning’s and Rabbeljee’s also veenstra’s. I’m located in Canada. Thanks for the informative videos.
Thanks for sharing!!
Hi Andrea,
You are very welcome. I'm glad you liked my video.
How did you stick the sandpaper to keep the profile?
Love it thanks for the video! About to start my first couple builds, and I hate buying tools or jigs when I can make them out of scraps. Have you thought of using a cove style bit on the router instead? I would think the flat bit would leave more track marks than a rounded point? Would require a ton more passes though, so I'm only speculating.
Nice jig Daniel
Cool Tutorial ... Where did you get that Under strings Radius Square Tool, My Friend.
Great video, do you order your guitar woods from Portugal ?
Hi HearGear,
Thank you very much.
I get my woods from a Dutch supplier.
Great idea, thanks a lot :)
Fantasticos los videos y usted un profesional , las guitarras son maravillosas. ¿podría decirme donde compra las maderas?. Muchas Gracias y un abrazo
Olvida donde compra la madera estas muy muy lejos
Very cool video! I wonder if one could make a compound radius beam? Would it work with minimal sanding motion? Am I nuts?
Great job on that but wouldn't using a more powerful router like a Colt trim router let you use bigger bits and speed up the process? I dig what you did here just a suggestion, keep up the great work!
nice trick mah man!
Great video!
Hey Generalanwalt,
Thank you very much!
I’m having trouble figuring out your Dremel jig for making the radiusing blocks. Can you explain how you made the jig please. Thank you for any help you can provide.
Hi dude
So if we want make 12inch radius block.
The distance pendulum and the bit is 12 inch?
Like that???
yup
The bottom of the pendulum and the bottom of the bit is 12 inches?
Great video! Is there anyway to make this with a different type of router? Maybe a bigger and more common one.
Hi Dani,
Yes, you can use any type of router you like. As long as the principle of a pendulum is maintained to get the radius you're after.
One thing to keep in mind is that a larger heavy router may require a very heavy and stable construction.
I should have subscribed earlier... Done now. Keep up the good work, guitars and videos! :)
ja ik bedenk me altijd dit, hoeveel gaat een mal me tijd kosten om te maken, hoeveel lol ga ik er aan beleven om die mal te maken, hoeveel tijd kost het me om het product te maken, en dan eindig ik vaak door gewoon de tool te kopen die ik nodig heb, en hoeveel die kosten. In dit geval zijn er op Rall guitars goed betaalbare schuurblokken à 50cm. Zo zag ik ook een video van iemand die een index liniaal maakte voor het zagen van fretslots, tja, het zou me meer dan 1 uur tijd kosten om zoiets te maken, en ik ga daar niet van genieten. Dus ik koop die gewoon, met cnc precisie. Laatst ''moest'' ik een jig maken voor een liplas, zodat ie echt goed vlak was.
How do you make a different radius other than a 12" radius?
The router jig has a higher mount point for the pendulum. You use that and get a longer swing on the arm, resulting in a wider arc. For a 16" radius, make sure the end of the router bit is 16" from the swivel point of the pendulum, and use the height adjustment he noted to make sure the piece is at the right cut depth.
I'm sorry. How do you find the radius in respect to the router? I didn't understand the process from the comments.
The router is mounted in such a way that it is X inches away from the fretboard (in this case, 12 inches away), so as it swings back and forth in a pendulum-like motion it carves away wood in that arc, simulating a 12" radius. Hope that makes sense!
What bit did you use in your dremel?
Hi Totefrosh,
It's a regular 12,7mm straight router bit for the Dremel Trio.
wow nice! Didn't know you make this tool. Last sanding is with paper 600 or even more?
If I recall correctly I think I only sanded this up to 380 grit sandpaper.
esta dificil amigo :/ pero gracias por el video. saludos desde Peru
Hi Cesar,
Thank you very much!
Almost definitely Sapele I would say
Thanks,
but that’s not a vest.