Thanks Chris, another great video!! I appreciate you. I'm a master carpenter but an amateur luthier, and I'm trying to make the transition both ocupationaly and physically!! I will always respect everything u have taught me my friend. Godspeed
Hope this helps: I place a playing card on top of the frets before marking (the top) and cutting, then scribe again when I'm finished, without the card. Love your videos. Thanks
Thank you for the video. Half pencil is an excellent tool that I have ever seen. Since I had already done mine prior to seeing your demo, now I will try your way to adjust my strings height.
To make my half pencils I use a contractor pencil which is already flat and rip it in half with a scroll saw and then sand each half flat. Twice the half pencils, less time sanding.
Alternatively, 3D print a “lead holder” with a 2mm half hole at the end and a grub screw clamp in the side and then sand off the small 2mm lead that you have at the end.
Thanks for sharing this wonderful series on Guitar Nuts! A question... Is it important to take the neck relief into consideration, when making a new nut, and when having to file the slots to the desired depth? Should the neck be straight or with the desired relief? Cheers.
Excellent tip! I have just recently began doing things like changing the nut and I never seem to find the right size and end up messing up the one I bought lol. I have some old bones from a cow, I think they are like maybe the pelvis area bones? What bones work best for making nuts, I was thinking like the leg or shank bones most likely because they are the most dense.
Ty for sharing. That pencil trick always puzzled me because if you are going off of the frets, the pencil mark is the same height as the first fret thus when cutting the slot to the pencil line, to me , the strings would be hitting the first fret. The pencil line being fret zero per say.
Don’t forget about the pencil line’s thickness. The top edge of the line is higher than the first fret by the same amount of the line’s thickness. Since the strings gradually climb toward the bridge, their clearance over the first fret is slightly higher than the pencil line’s thickness. Ideally, you should slot to a depth just above the pencil line and gradually creep up to the final depth.
Question when you find the time. I'm about to slot my nut. Some ppl just cut the slot at neck angle and let all of the string rest on material. Others roll it so that just some of the string touches the material. Then profile nut to remove material to make strings rest in a not so deep slot. Particularly the wound strings. What's your thoughts? Thanks for your time! Jim.
Do you think that thickness of a nut is playing a roll in sustain in any way (Thickness I mean like a Les Paul verses a Strat)? I see that your nuts have the thickness of a Les Paul
That is the most gorgeous fretboard would I have ever seen!!!
You’re a flippin’ genius! I’ve learned so much here. This is an awesome tip! Thank you
Thanks Chris, another great video!! I appreciate you. I'm a master carpenter but an amateur luthier, and I'm trying to make the transition both ocupationaly and physically!! I will always respect everything u have taught me my friend. Godspeed
Thanks Glarry Guitars, I really appreciate the kind words.,
Hope this helps: I place a playing card on top of the frets before marking (the top) and cutting, then scribe again when I'm finished, without the card. Love your videos. Thanks
@@chipsterb4946 yes, exactly
very clever
Perfect Chris! You explained it and demonstrated it perfectly!
Wow Chris, you are really ingenious!. Thank you for the tip
That’s a fantastic trick. I have a few instruments that require customized nuts and I will certainly use this trick. Thank you for sharing.
Going to be making my very first guitar nut very soon , so this video is very timely & useful !! Love all the helpful tips !!
Thank you for the video. Half pencil is an excellent tool that I have ever seen. Since I had already done mine prior to seeing your demo, now I will try your way to adjust my strings height.
To make my half pencils I use a contractor pencil which is already flat and rip it in half with a scroll saw and then sand each half flat. Twice the half pencils, less time sanding.
I have 2 12string that need new nuts. this is a great way for me to start.. and yes.. I bought some extra nuts to practice with
Looking forward to nut slotting video! Thanks for sharing this tip!
Thanks for your great explation
thank you Chris
Thanks Chris
I've just sanded a pencil!! Thanks for the excellent tip.
Love the pencil ✏️ thanks
Thank You
looking forward to the next one , thanks for posting :)
great tip : love ur channel - keep it up !!
Great tip! Going to make my "Nut pencil" tonight.
I used a plane to make mine much quicker
BRILLIANT!!!
Alternatively, 3D print a “lead holder” with a 2mm half hole at the end and a grub screw clamp in the side and then sand off the small 2mm lead that you have at the end.
Make it a 3/4 hole and then face the lead point at an angle.
Go for it.
Thanks for sharing this wonderful series on Guitar Nuts!
A question... Is it important to take the neck relief into consideration, when making a new nut, and when having to file the slots to the desired depth?
Should the neck be straight or with the desired relief?
Cheers.
With regards to the depth of the slots in the nut, I am only concerned with the height of the string over the first fret.
Excellent tip! I have just recently began doing things like changing the nut and I never seem to find the right size and end up messing up the one I bought lol.
I have some old bones from a cow, I think they are like maybe the pelvis area bones? What bones work best for making nuts, I was thinking like the leg or shank bones most likely because they are the most dense.
Yes, the bones in the leg.
Ty for sharing. That pencil trick always puzzled me because if you are going off of the frets, the pencil mark is the same height as the first fret thus when cutting the slot to the pencil line, to me , the strings would be hitting the first fret. The pencil line being fret zero per say.
Don’t forget about the pencil line’s thickness. The top edge of the line is higher than the first fret by the same amount of the line’s thickness. Since the strings gradually climb toward the bridge, their clearance over the first fret is slightly higher than the pencil line’s thickness. Ideally, you should slot to a depth just above the pencil line and gradually creep up to the final depth.
Ty! 👍
Question when you find the time. I'm about to slot my nut. Some ppl just cut the slot at neck angle and let all of the string rest on material. Others roll it so that just some of the string touches the material. Then profile nut to remove material to make strings rest in a not so deep slot. Particularly the wound strings. What's your thoughts? Thanks for your time! Jim.
@@jameshenz1780 I don't understand your question, but this video explains how I slot a nut: th-cam.com/video/1mZKHkuWzPs/w-d-xo.html
Never seen anyone use the half pencil trick, I wonder how they manage to get it right with the full width pencils they use?
This rocks, i am going to the best builder as a plumber can be.😂😂😂
The Flencil!
King
What is the fretboard material in this build?
Bocote.
@@HighlineGuitars beautiful. Would you descrbe porous ornot?
I use a micro planer to cut my pencils in half
Do you think that thickness of a nut is playing a roll in sustain in any way (Thickness I mean like a Les Paul verses a Strat)?
I see that your nuts have the thickness of a Les Paul
Yes. A thicker nut increases to odds of losing sustain if the nut isn't cut properly.
One more thing Chris, these fools don't know a 64th of an inch from a hole in the ground 😮😂