There is an order of precedence in building a guitar. For me, it begins with the soundboard, goes to the back, then the sides, all of which come together into the body of the guitar. Then comes the neck, the fretboard, the saddle, and the set up. I will go through all the steps in order, but the first is the soundboard. I have some plates that have survived the flood so I will not need to re-saw additional plates, and I use a rather traditional method of joining the plates, but in the meantime there are are several things that should be done first. I will need, in order, templates for the guitar, a shooting jig, a work-board, and a thickness sander. I laid out the templates yesterday on 0.25 hardboard, and will cut them out today. Progress was hampered a bit as my wife and I painted an apothecary cabinet that I had built for her, and I didn't want dust to contaminate and pock the finish. It should go into the house today, and so my goal is to cut out the templates -- not a particularly ambitious goal, but a goal.
In the meantime, I had ordered and several of the parts for the thickness sander have arrived -- two pullies (one three inch, one two inch), two pillow bearings, and a 5/8-11 threaded rod. It is the beginning of the thickness sander. The plan is relatively simple -- a bed, hinged to a frame, that rises against a spinning drum. The 5/8-11 threaded rod will be the arbor for the drum, the larger pully will be attached to the arbor, the smaller to the arbor of my table saw, which will supply the power. The idea of using the table saw is not my own. It originates with Shop Notes. My design, however, is much simpler. There is virtue in simplicity, so long as it works.
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