Sharp eyes people, very sharp! The amount of movement as I 'wiggled it' worried me and I spotted that too, I'm not surprised it didn't make the edit.. I was mid conversation with a solicitor who specialises in intellectual property, patents etc. The joy of filming with an ever changing and incredibly interesting audience stopping by.
That’s the ethos I had to take when fixing my late fathers guitar (a relatively worthless but sentimentally significant old Rose Morris/Shaftesbury acoustic) I’d never have started it, let alone finished it if I’d chased perfection- but it’s stuck where it’s supposed to be and not going anywhere, it still plays/sounds amazing and it’s scars are all part of its story.
One thing I learned in the ski repair shops... Most people are not racing on the world cup, you don't have to make it perfect; make it work, or work better.
I first came across your videos when you built the bog oak resin guitar. I kinda miss the builds like that, done in crimson workshop. Start to finish, 1 build at at a time.
@CrimsonCustomGuitars Thanks for your reply. It wasn't criticism, merely an opinion. However, I will definitely look forward to those. Good to see you looking relaxed and well.🙏
IMHO every instrument is worth saving if it's possible. Last year I got a heavily abused strat body from a friend. He figured I might have some use for it. Last week I was sorting some leftover components, and I decided to just build a complete new guitar from spare parts. Even found a squire neck I could pick up for free! So now I own my very first fender partscaster XD Perfection in repairs, to me means the best possible repair within the time-frame you have, and with the means you have. In this case, making sure the instrument can be used again as intended! It clearly worked ;)
Nice work Ben. Desire for perfection stops a lot of people from attempting or completing a project. Thats why my first guitar (after watching Ben's videos) was a test guitar. It was not meant to be playable, so, I took chances and tested ideas. Ended up playable, even though it was only made of pine. As for the repair, easy to say as a watcher but I think drilling 2 dowel holes through the head stock to prevent slipping makes life easy (same as the way you show for fret boards).
I can totally relate to your struggle. Ret'd motorcycle mech. All my life....want to do it perfect.....always under time constraints.....just how much 'quest for perfection' can I get away with? How much IS too much. The very fact it concerns you is a good thing, IMO. Enjoy your work......I do.
Hello Great video If you have time please highlight a binding repair To confirm the glue required etc I have a Martin 00028 2015 purchase Where the binding on the rear Waist area is failing Many thanks
I've done more than my fair share of rough and ready headstock repairs, it's surprising how little wood contact it takes to hold it all together and make it a functioning instrument again.
If you are still looking for a product name for the neck rest, which I like really well. Every time I see it in use, it reminds me of Atlas holding up the earth. It could be called the Atlas neck rest. Have a great day Ben, and thank you for all you do. You are my favorite guitar building channel. Right on later gator.
I never want a headstock to break on my guitars, but if it happens, I’d love for it to have happened at Glastonbury. Even more so if someone from Crimson had been on hand to repair it. Guitars get their wounds and their wounds tell stories.
Field repairs vs restoration tier repairs. We all want flawless restoration, most of the time... On a campfire basher though, yea just get er strummin' again.
Yup - was handed a cheap LP clone to practice a repair on by a friend of mine. Total headstock break - actually quite similar to the one you just did - with the headstock veneer being cracked through Effectively zero monetary value and no sentimental value - so I could experiment a bit. Ended up glueing and then adding a couple of splines. As ugly a repair as you could imagine - although I did try and clean it up with some drop filling, sanding and adding a stinger to try and hide the repair. Still ugly as sin, but it has held up for a year or more (tuned down to D-standard on 10's) I am considering adding a belly cut and smoothing out the neck heel-to-body transition (like an LP Modern) as I can mess it up and there is no problem.
2:38 I've started wondering if the truss rod adjustment at the headstock is part of why old gibsons (and clones) tend to break more than old fenders (and clones).
Informative video as always, not that it's the kind of repair I would ever undertake.... Fairly sure you've mentioned it before on earlier videos but where to you get your jewellery from as I need that skull ring you're wearing.
I watched most of the video. That's pretty much how it is done. I've done a few neck breaks. The cleaner the break the better and the more surface area the better. I remove all the tuners so I do not have that weight to deal with.
Absolutely, this is a relatively simple repair most of the time, that many people feel an irrational fear of! It can get complicated with old breaks and when you require extra strengthening etc
I call it “auditioning” the clamp job. It usually takes three or four auditions before everything is ready to go. Once I’m satisfied, the actual glue-up happens very quickly.
Yes, it can do. I generally don't wear them in the workshop, by this point of the festival.. Well, I was a bit more relaxed about things.. Like, well.. Hot showers, regular meals.. Chunky rings... I have regrets 😅
No.. It's too brittle, it may hold for a while, hell, maybe forever, but one good knock and it would probably sheer off at the joint again. Wood glue is best in this case imo
As fun as the first half of this video was, I feel like this is the equivalent of TH-cam blue balls to not have the ending of the guy throwing a few cowboy chords on the guitar, thanking you profusely and throwing it in his backpack and riding off into Glastonbury!
Not really, epoxy forms a film in between the two surfaces and can be quite brittle and we'll share again if it is shocked, which happens to headstocks quite a lot. Wood glue penetrates the wood a little bit and if it breaks again will likely hold, the break will be near the old break, not a re break like with epoxy...
A headstock repair...on a non-Gibson guitar??? I'm very surprised to see the need for a repair like this on an Ibanez; I thought Gibson had patented the "Trick Headstock". I hope Gibson doesn't decide to sue Ibanez for violating their patent if the see this video.
🤣🤣🤣 Actually I have an Ibanez Vintage # 950 ; bought in 1976. Its my dream guitar; low action, superb specs. Never ever give your earned cash to a firm/brand who despises everyone & bully them even in court. . Boycott Gibson. My 2 cnts.
Yeah Ben, take back the channel!!! Can't wait to see what you do next! You've inspired me to start building my own guitars!
10:21 You can see that the fretboard has come away as you wiggle it.
I noticed that as well .
Sharp eyes people, very sharp! The amount of movement as I 'wiggled it' worried me and I spotted that too, I'm not surprised it didn't make the edit.. I was mid conversation with a solicitor who specialises in intellectual property, patents etc. The joy of filming with an ever changing and incredibly interesting audience stopping by.
Guitar builds, experimental lutherie and repairs sounds good, Ben. Glad to see you online, looking fit and trim!
GREAT to have you back Ben !!!!!!!
Thank you
Not all heroes wear capes. But I think you could pull one off Ben.
Looking forward to you going back to guitar building and repairs. Thanks for sharing.
You and me both!
That’s the ethos I had to take when fixing my late fathers guitar (a relatively worthless but sentimentally significant old Rose Morris/Shaftesbury acoustic)
I’d never have started it, let alone finished it if I’d chased perfection- but it’s stuck where it’s supposed to be and not going anywhere, it still plays/sounds amazing and it’s scars are all part of its story.
One thing I learned in the ski repair shops... Most people are not racing on the world cup, you don't have to make it perfect; make it work, or work better.
I first came across your videos when you built the bog oak resin guitar. I kinda miss the builds like that, done in crimson workshop. Start to finish, 1 build at at a time.
Working on it. More builds being planned.
@CrimsonCustomGuitars Thanks for your reply. It wasn't criticism, merely an opinion. However, I will definitely look forward to those. Good to see you looking relaxed and well.🙏
Good looking perfect straight in the eye.
I love and appreciate these on-the-fly, troubleshooting, educational vids. Thanks for sharing!
My pleasure.
Bravo this is what we want
IMHO every instrument is worth saving if it's possible. Last year I got a heavily abused strat body from a friend. He figured I might have some use for it. Last week I was sorting some leftover components, and I decided to just build a complete new guitar from spare parts. Even found a squire neck I could pick up for free! So now I own my very first fender partscaster XD
Perfection in repairs, to me means the best possible repair within the time-frame you have, and with the means you have. In this case, making sure the instrument can be used again as intended! It clearly worked ;)
Missed your videos! Good to see it coming back
Hey, thanks!
Nice work Ben. Desire for perfection stops a lot of people from attempting or completing a project. Thats why my first guitar (after watching Ben's videos) was a test guitar. It was not meant to be playable, so, I took chances and tested ideas. Ended up playable, even though it was only made of pine. As for the repair, easy to say as a watcher but I think drilling 2 dowel holes through the head stock to prevent slipping makes life easy (same as the way you show for fret boards).
Thank you Ben. Loved this video
My pleasure!
I can totally relate to your struggle. Ret'd motorcycle mech. All my life....want to do it perfect.....always under time constraints.....just how much 'quest for perfection' can I get away with? How much IS too much. The very fact it concerns you is a good thing, IMO.
Enjoy your work......I do.
dude you've lost so much weight and you look fantastic! Also you kinda look like the 'space pirate' from the Martian...so cool! Great video Ben!
Glad to see Ben coming back to his u tube roots.
Does the addition of sugar make a sweeter sounding guitar?
makes your chords fall out
No but it gives you automatic sweetened tunings.
Hello
Great video
If you have time please highlight a binding repair
To confirm the glue required etc
I have a Martin 00028 2015 purchase
Where the binding on the rear
Waist area is failing
Many thanks
I've done more than my fair share of rough and ready headstock repairs, it's surprising how little wood contact it takes to hold it all together and make it a functioning instrument again.
If you are still looking for a product name for the neck rest, which I like really well. Every time I see it in use, it reminds me of Atlas holding up the earth. It could be called the Atlas neck rest. Have a great day Ben, and thank you for all you do. You are my favorite guitar building channel. Right on later gator.
I never want a headstock to break on my guitars, but if it happens, I’d love for it to have happened at Glastonbury. Even more so if someone from Crimson had been on hand to repair it. Guitars get their wounds and their wounds tell stories.
Innovative uses of Glastonbury white powder
Field repairs vs restoration tier repairs. We all want flawless restoration, most of the time... On a campfire basher though, yea just get er strummin' again.
beware Glastonbury "sugar" lost a whole day talking to a massive pink dragon
Yup - was handed a cheap LP clone to practice a repair on by a friend of mine.
Total headstock break - actually quite similar to the one you just did - with the headstock veneer being cracked through
Effectively zero monetary value and no sentimental value - so I could experiment a bit.
Ended up glueing and then adding a couple of splines.
As ugly a repair as you could imagine - although I did try and clean it up with some drop filling, sanding and adding a stinger to try and hide the repair.
Still ugly as sin, but it has held up for a year or more (tuned down to D-standard on 10's)
I am considering adding a belly cut and smoothing out the neck heel-to-body transition (like an LP Modern) as I can mess it up and there is no problem.
Great Repair Ben
Thank you
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars you are welcome
"I'm looking for a 'sweeter' sound."
"Have you tried sugar in your guitar?"
😁
Well done as usual
"WELCOME to Crimson Guitars WELCOME to my luthiery yurt..."
2:38 I've started wondering if the truss rod adjustment at the headstock is part of why old gibsons (and clones) tend to break more than old fenders (and clones).
Informative video as always, not that it's the kind of repair I would ever undertake....
Fairly sure you've mentioned it before on earlier videos but where to you get your jewellery from as I need that skull ring you're wearing.
I want to see a full size accoustic with a spruce or cedar top. I bet Ben would carve an epic archtop.
Build one with bone frets! Nylon strings, piezo bridge, 17th century accoutrements!!!
Piezo.. 17th century? 🤔😈. Bloody tempting, and genuinely on the cards on day.
I watched most of the video. That's pretty much how it is done. I've done a few neck breaks. The cleaner the break the better and the more surface area the better. I remove all the tuners so I do not have that weight to deal with.
Absolutely, this is a relatively simple repair most of the time, that many people feel an irrational fear of! It can get complicated with old breaks and when you require extra strengthening etc
I rather like that salt/sugar trick!
Don’t let the perfect get in the way of the good.
nice
Thanks
I call it “auditioning” the clamp job. It usually takes three or four auditions before everything is ready to go. Once I’m satisfied, the actual glue-up happens very quickly.
Brilliant 😂
Toolmakers clamps (Engineering) ❤
Perfection is not necessary as long as the guitar is repaired to a playable condition in the conditions that you had to work in
Another side channel? I'm still waiting for you to start put something on the Weekend Workshop channel 😂
Whilst I share your love of wearing lots of massive rings, does it not interfere with your work on guitars? Accidental damage etc?
Yes, it can do. I generally don't wear them in the workshop, by this point of the festival.. Well, I was a bit more relaxed about things.. Like, well.. Hot showers, regular meals.. Chunky rings... I have regrets 😅
Would super glue work for that?
No.. It's too brittle, it may hold for a while, hell, maybe forever, but one good knock and it would probably sheer off at the joint again. Wood glue is best in this case imo
Does being "off piste" make you "piste off" 😊
😂😂
As fun as the first half of this video was, I feel like this is the equivalent of TH-cam blue balls to not have the ending of the guy throwing a few cowboy chords on the guitar, thanking you profusely and throwing it in his backpack and riding off into Glastonbury!
My bad, I really screwed up on this one 😑
Wouldn't epoxy be better than wood glue for this kind of thing?
Not really, epoxy forms a film in between the two surfaces and can be quite brittle and we'll share again if it is shocked, which happens to headstocks quite a lot. Wood glue penetrates the wood a little bit and if it breaks again will likely hold, the break will be near the old break, not a re break like with epoxy...
A headstock repair...on a non-Gibson guitar??? I'm very surprised to see the need for a repair like this on an Ibanez; I thought Gibson had patented the "Trick Headstock". I hope Gibson doesn't decide to sue Ibanez for violating their patent if the see this video.
🤣🤣🤣
Actually I have an Ibanez Vintage # 950 ; bought in 1976. Its my dream guitar; low action, superb specs.
Never ever give your earned cash to a firm/brand who despises everyone & bully them even in court.
.
Boycott Gibson.
My 2 cnts.
Yes, don't have to, but we Want this level of perfection ;) (or working on it, at least... :) )
Working on it!
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars indeed :) (wait... work... it's not magic ?!!!!?)
That engineers clamp, is called a toolmakers clamp.
Telling Ben what a tool is called 🤣
"Glastonbury Festival sugar" sounds like the name of something that is absolutely not actual sugar.
Lol. I'm sure I dont know what you mean!
When a Buddy says ,"you put 400 Dollars worth of work into it and you'll have a 200 dollar guitar" you got to think about it.
There is well worn quality assessment - ‘good enough for government work’. Get there and then make it 20% better, you’re there.
Not the first joint to be fixed at Glastonbury...
Didn't even tAke off ALL the tuners because it had a weight difference there wood alone has hardly any weight
I think he said fek. 😊
No. You do not have a bunch of wood. 🙄
It is NOT a fucking bunch of wood (".)