Warmoth Strat | Tru Oil finished | Roasted Body & Neck
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 มิ.ย. 2024
- Making a dream Strat from a roasted Swamp Ash body and roasted maple neck, both by Warmoth.
Watch me apply a hand rubbed Tru-Oil finish, with glossy results.
Also, swamp ash is the best body wood. It's true, believe me.
Update:
The weight of the new guitar is 3kg / 6.6lbs in total.
Specs:
Body: Roasted Swamp Ash, top routed, Strat body by Warmoth
Neck: Roasted maple, boat neck profile, stainless steel frets, Earvana nut, Strat neck by Warmoth
Bareknuckle Pickups Old Guard (Boot Camp) Single Coil set
Wilkinson WV2, 2 Point Trem, black
Gotoh SG360-07-MGT staggered Locking Tuners, black
Free-Way Blade Switch (10 Way Switch)
Chapters:
00:00 Intro
00:46 Roasted Swamp Ash is light
00:58 Testing different sealers
01:17 Sealing the body
02:52 Finishing the Neck with Tru Oil
04:50 Finishing the Body with Tru Oil
05:57 Applying Shielding Paint
06:15 The Hardware
07:04 Polishing and Buffing
08:02 More Hardware, Electronics and Assembly
09:41 Sound Demo
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This is the gold that TH-cam used to be known for. No rubbish, just a very well made video by Arnold, I mean, Georg ;). Thanks mate for the great video, I learnt a lot.
"Geddout of dayuh!"
Nice job. I have an American '61 re-issue Strat that I bought a Warmoth neck for. I've been playing it over 15 years. Warmoth makes some of the best after market necks and bodies out there. I highly recommend them.
Focus, Hocus Pocus!
Sounds great, looks great, and you did a fantastic job building it! Thanks for taking us along for the journey!
Just absolutely beautiful! Great job!
great work!
thanks for sharing
that color is beautiful
Damn that thing sounds GREAT!!!! And looks even better.
Beautiful natural wood. Your patient work really gets a great result!
Mate I'm so happy you're uploading again, I love you videos. cheers !
Great video and great result!
Best pickup selection demo EVER, great video broseph 😎👍👑
Good job looks great and sounds great
FOCUS!! That easily deserves a Like!! Nice work all around!!
Came across this while looking for ash warmoth videos.. well done man was an enjoyable video to watch!
Gorgeous axe!
BEAUTY!
Good job!
I'm so glad you are back :)
here to stay now :)
Amazing!!!
My avenger is swamp ash.. love it
That is abso-fookin-lutely gorgeous man! Congratulations! Best Regards and Best Wishes!
Ukraine? Really?
Great work man!
I did a warmoth mahogany body in tru-oil.
I took my time and applied layer after layer. Probably 25-30 coats over about 6 weeks with plenty of dry time.
Tru-oil layers, it doesn’t fuse into itself so each layer reflects light.
It’s beautiful.
Not a satin but not glossy either, just a beautiful deep oil finish.
I’m building a telecaster next, going with roasted swamp ash and I’ll use tru-oil again except I like the grain feel so I won’t be grain filling.
You did great ! I thing Warmoth has wonderful parts.
No telling what a roasted neck n body like that would run from fenders custom shop , very nice 👍
10-way switch 🤯
it's like a 5 way switch, but with a second "bank" of 5 additional pickup combinations :)
th-cam.com/video/3Sxe__KhRpI/w-d-xo.html
Nice! I'm doing an explorer with tru-oil !! 🤘
looks so good. the roasted swa,p asj provides a perfect color and grain. Instead of pumice, have you thorught about applying thre Tru-oil, and then sanding it while it is wet, the dust will fill the pores. I learned this from a gunsmith, who made custom rifle stocks. They were were perfectly smooth.
yes, I've heard of that technique, or some people apply the Tru Oil while sanding, all in one go.
I might try that in the future. But that time I thought using pumice has the lowest risk of me messing up.
What a great video. Thanks. I'm planning on doing something similar soon (first time) so I've bookmarked this and subscribed. Edit: Is there a DIY handheld power tool you could maybe recommend for the buffering/polishing?
Thanks :)
Yes, there are eccentric car polishers that are handheld
Phenomenal work! And that riff at 10:04 is familiar but i cant place it. Sounds like Nintendo!
Thanks :) that riff is from the "athletic theme" from Super Mario 3 (or maybe 1, I'm not sure)
I play a 2005 Gibson Swamp ash L/P, wholesome range,
niiiiiiiiiiiiice :)
looks great I just would prefer a satin or matte finish
Great video!
I have never heard of the filler/sealer from birchwood before. Do you have any idea what it contains or what it is based on?
I bought the "Sealer & Filler" years ago, as part of a 3 part kit: Tru Oil, Sealer and Wax
This is the data sheet:
www.birchwoodcasey.com/content/datasheets/23323%20Gun%20Stock%20Sealer%20%26%20Filler.pdf
Nice guitar. Btw, did you have to dress or level the frets?
On Warmoth necks I never had to do so, the frets were already perfect (which was good because I don't have tools to level stainless steel frets)
It looks like you need a few more coats of TruOil and some light sanding to fill it in a it smoother. TruOil is a great product I use it on many things.
On that guitar I actually like that the grain shows through the finish:)
Nice work! I’m really interested in doing the same to my Warmoth roasted maple neck. How much mineral spirits do you mix in to the Tru Oil? Is this a crucial step or would it be fine to do the wipe on/off with just the oil? About 2 coats? Thanks man
I mix in about a quarter to a third of mineral spirits. It's not crucial for the 2 coats that go on a roasted maple neck.
Beautiful guitar. How do you get the fender sound? That of little wings.
Using the neck pickup of a strat is a good starting point, and then into a Fender type amp. I used my Axe Fx 2, with either a Bassman or a Twin Reverb amp selected.
@GeorgFigel thank you, mate.
I would like make a guitar like you did here. But with small details something different. Thanks Georg
How long did you wait in between true oil coats? What was the temp @ that time? thx for the video
I sometimes did even 3 coats per day, 6 hours apart
But I did thin the tru oil with 1/3rd mineral spirits, which evaporates quickly.
Otherwise I think it's recommended to wait 8 between each coat
Didn‘t think on my kit build to clean the body with lighter fluid before clear paint. Now I have a bunch of weird looking stains on the bottom back of the body, wich change shape when tilting against the light….🤷🏻♂️🤦🏻😏 (finger grease… and sweat from sanding in August heat)
That'll make it your unique instrument then ;) but some imperfections always happen, I think
At first, i thought what a great craftsman. Now i think, what a great artist!
How is tru-oil vs old nitrocellulose? No yellowing over time i would think? And do you find ( like The Beatles), that unfinished opens up tone?
Thanks! ✌️
Thank you so much
I guess the yellowing of nitro takes years? The bass that I've finished with Nitro 2 years ago shows no signs of yellowing yet.
Tru oil has an amber color to begin with. And the guitars I've used it on didn't show any aging. But maybe after 10 years they might.
Paul Reed Smith says that there's a small difference in tone between an unfinished and a finished guitar.
Maybe I should do a test at some point, comparing the sound of raw wood Vs finished:)
@
Thank you for the reply. Great info.
Regardless of tone differences, I find guitars that are unfinished get beat-up much easier (dings, chips in wood). If tonality changes are minimal , then it doesn't seem a good trade off.
@@The3fingers yes, and the wood would get dirty over time as it's hard to keep unfinished wood clean
@
There is a guitar I bought where someone removed the finish and used some sort of matte sealer. I'll do a video of it and send you a link soon. It needs something like maybe tung-oil, but I have no knowledge of how to refinish wood. Thanks! 👍
Excellent Video, I just purchased a Music Man Sabre Guitar but this year did it not come with the Oil Finished Neck from Music man, " Headstock Only" I just purchased the " Tru Oil" " Wood Wax" Per Music Man as well. My Question is how long did you wait between coats on the Neck & Fingerboard? 12 hours-24Hours? Also good tip on cutting the Tru oil with Mineral Spirits, was that per Music man? I didn't get that detail from them. Thanks
I only know things by word of mouth regarding what music man does (e.g. online forums and other tru oil TH-cam videos).
But adding a bit of naphta or mineral spirits helps to make the tru oil thinner and go on smoother. Drying time is reduced as the mineral spirits will evaporate rather quickly, so I did 3 coats per day, waiting only around 4 hours in between.
However, before applying the wax I recommend to wait at least 12 hours after the last coat.
@ Great advice, thanks, I just didn't want build up between the frets.
@@johnnyromero3336 in case something got on the frets then it can be scraped off with your fingernails after the oil cured
@ makes sense, easy enough. Thanks
No fight in the comments. Swamp Ash is definitely the best body wood. I would make an argument for Walnut if it wasn't for weight, but because of the weight it's best used as cap or veneer. Swamp Ash reigns supreme!
You're right about walnut, I have a walnut guitar (body and neck, birch cap) and it sounds really sweet. Luckily made from a light piece
Does the wax affect how fast the neck feels?
Yes, a little bit. After breaking it in (playing the neck for 20 minutes or so)
Great job with those bodies man! They ended up looking great! Didn't know about the ash wood shortage, that sucks. I wish I was as handy as you and had a place to work on instruments too. Maybe someday! Cheers! It's a pleasure to watch your vids, awesome production/quality as always.
before applying any layer of tru oil, how did you sand the body? with what abrasive paper?
I cleaned the body with mineral spirits, then applied 2 coats of the tru oil sealer, then I sanded it with a sanding sponge (I think it might be a 320 grit) and then I applied tru oil
@ thank you so much
Where do you get that buffing wheel?
from a German online shop www.wonisch-tec.de
thanks
when extra finish drips down the sides - this will cause lines... do the edges first
I hope that is tone pumice.
Special guitar pumice ;)
Thank u georg now i can overthrow the Salvadorian goverment
But be careful though
So, why does Wamoth not warranty their necks if they have an oil finish. I've been using Tru Oil for years on Osage bows and it's durable as hell once you build up multiple thin coats. Planned on using it on my upcoming build...
I'm guessing it's just a "cover your ass" on their part because you never know what kind of rubbish people might try to finish their necks with? Lol
I think it's exactly what you said. Not all oil finishes are created equally and it's easier to give no warranty on oil finishes as a whole than to list each specific product. But any oil that cures hard and waterproof should do the trick.
@ Thanks for the reply. I planned on a couple thin coats of tru oil followed by a coat of Tried and True(a beeswax/linseed oil mix).
@@CloudfeatherRusticWorks that will surely work well :)
those bugs are disgusting!
When you started playing, i thought you were about to break out with th-cam.com/video/ncxoUrUo_qA/w-d-xo.html 🎸
Oh that song is awesome as well :)
Cool woodwork but the wood of the body has practically zero effect on the sound. It's all makebelief, might as well put some crystals inside the pickups to keep the evil spirits out.
well, while it's true that a solid body guitar has no soundbox, it's still a good idea to have a strong but lightweight material for the body (it doesn't even need to be wood, it's great to work with though).
Hard materials = snappy sound, stable guitar
soft materials = mellow sound, possible stability issues (depending on how soft)
The swamp ash body that I've used here is very light considering its wood hardness/stiffness rating. And it looks great.
@ can you give one experimental proof of what you're saying, or is it you just passing on folks tales? it's been tested multiple times. There's a guy on TH-cam that shows that the same setup with different woods doesn't make any tone difference.
@@crapadopalese well, my claim there was that the ideal body material should be strong while being relatively light (doesn't even need to be wood)
All typically used guitar body woods are classified as "hardwoods", which are all easily strong enough to handle the string tension etc.
and then it's a matter of preference if the wood should look a certain way, or if someone likes a hefty guitar or a lighter one etc.
@recently I restored the ugliest and the cheapest guitar in the world with MDF body (yes, MDF!!!), Stratocaster-like ugly piece of crap with 3 single-coil pickups with steel plates attached to magnets from the bottom. And it sounds like Stratocaster should sound - clean glassy tone with big amount of twang. Of course, the body is made of shit, hardware is below bad, but pickups are not that bad. So wood doesn't matter.
If pickups are good, they will pull out any material the body or neck are made of.
@b94qo
Black hardware on a wood grain guitar? 👎Gold on wood looks best. The guitar should shine and be seen from the back of the room not fade into the darkness. My esthetic opinion.
I'm also a fan of gold hw. I have an upcoming guitar build with a lot of gold early next year.
The dark finish looks horrific.
Man du sprichst wie Arni beste