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| Tele Home Depot Building a T-Style guitar? From scratch or from parts. This is the forum for you. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Seattle
Age: 49
Posts: 3,152
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Anyone make their own bridge? Here's what I did...
This was a project I did a while ago - and always wondered if perhaps others had some thoughts on the best ways to make your own bridge. So - I'll post my approach and see if others have some thoughts.
I looked at my tele bridge and thought that I could make my own. Since I'm going to be building a bunch of guitars from scratch - it makes sense to try to make the bridge from scratch as well. The most obvious source of material I had was some electrical box lids - I house all of my DIY effects using these as well - so, I have a bunch of these laying around. I already had some saddles I was going to use. So, I downloaded and sized the modern bridge picture from stu-mac and then glued it to the top of an electrical junction box lid. Next I got a metal blade and put it in my band saw and cut the metal to size on the sides. I also used a jig saw to cut out the center. ![]() Next, I took the metal and bent the rear of it up for the saddle adjustment. ![]() Then, mounted in a vise and bent it to roughly 90 degrees. ![]() ![]()
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#2 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Seattle
Age: 49
Posts: 3,152
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These are a couple after bending:
![]() ![]() I don't have pictures for the rest, but what I did was to pull the paper off and laydown some good straight lines and used a grinder to grind down to a set of nice straight lines. Also, I put a curve on the corners and the edges to that there were no sharp edges. Next, I put a wire brush on my drill and brushed it until all of the tooling marks were hidden. Lastly, I used a flat piece of steel and some plywood - turned it over and pounded it completely flat again. Then I sanded the bottom of the bridge plate to make sure it was as flat as can be. The bridge turned out to be not a pretty/shiny thing to look at, but it was shaped correctly and had all of the holes in the right spots - as per the picture I downloaded. It's 1/2 the thickness as the gotoh Tele bridge and not as ridged. When I bolted it to my Tele, attached the saddles and fixed the intonation it seemed to handle the tension well. I could tel that it was not quite as solid as the gotoh bridge, but it was working fine. The tone of the guitar was quite different though - the bridge pickup sounded different and the overall tone - even on the neck pickup - was kind of hollow sounding. Not a bad tone, but noticeably different from the gotoh bridge. I'm wondering if anyone else has tried something similar with different material and could note their results? |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Doctor of Teleocity
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I made one out of the stainless steel from a beer keg, and the control cover too.
It sounds excellent with some old Fender Stainless saddles. Body was reclaimed 45 year old pine form a water bed frame, the neck an early MIK Might Might V Neck with bone nut and string Tee. DIY butterscotch Nitro blend. etc etc... Posted this so many time here when I first did it I should be shot. ;(
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A Twin always will cut it... but I don't recommend it for everybody. It's like a big dog, you have to take responsibility for it. Not to mention... be prepared to lift it. BTW, how $good$ a guitar is, is no indicator of how badly it can be played! |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Doctor of Teleocity
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IIRC, about he same as a Vintage plate .065 area.
I also used nickles on that one. I later donated the guitar to a starving musician [is there any other kin? ;) ] and he asked me to take the nickles out before I gave it to him. Plus I wanted my Stainless ender Saddles back, so he got some RS guitar works saddles I put on. Well after a short time he put them back in and says it sounds better and the saddle screws were a little short with out the nickles to jack it up high the way he likes it. ;) But I think that metal for the 1900 box covers [and elec boxes in general] is pretty much just reboiled scrap crap. The Stainless from the keg is pretty high quality steel, and IMO sustains accordingly.
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A Twin always will cut it... but I don't recommend it for everybody. It's like a big dog, you have to take responsibility for it. Not to mention... be prepared to lift it. BTW, how $good$ a guitar is, is no indicator of how badly it can be played! |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Riverside, California
Age: 49
Posts: 764
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This one is made from 20ga. steel that I got at Home depot. Used a wilkinson bridge as a template for the holes, and then cut, ground, drilled, sanded, and heat treated it to get the look.
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Let someone else do the white paint job! |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Doctor of Teleocity
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Guard is leather Mike ?
__________________
A Twin always will cut it... but I don't recommend it for everybody. It's like a big dog, you have to take responsibility for it. Not to mention... be prepared to lift it. BTW, how $good$ a guitar is, is no indicator of how badly it can be played! |
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#10 (permalink) |
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formerly "Big" Mike Simpson
Poster Extraordinaire
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Yes it's leather you can see it in page 2 of the Palletcaster $100 build thread.
http://www.tdpri.com/forum/2009-%241...tcaster-2.html |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Doctor of Teleocity
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Yea, I remember now. What dye did you use for the black on the leather, I love that raw look. Maybe I will replace the carbon fiber vinyl one I put on my 48 Proto is build.
I had entered that also with my pine 48 Proto B_caster. But bubbling Nitro from farting pine slowed me way down and I pulled out of the competition. I did finish up the body later, tossed on a MIM neck and actually it is one of my favs. Nice nasty pine Esquire with a 8.5k PUP. ;( Snarly too, but I still ave trouble parting with my creations. Only have 2 out there among gigging players. ;( And the guitar room is getting smaller and smaller. Last time I use no wax shellac as a sealer. I use just a lacquer wash or now pollycrilic min-wax to keep the gasses in the wood, as a sealer. ;) Here she is with just a MIM neck on her so I could play her. Quote:
__________________
A Twin always will cut it... but I don't recommend it for everybody. It's like a big dog, you have to take responsibility for it. Not to mention... be prepared to lift it. BTW, how $good$ a guitar is, is no indicator of how badly it can be played! |
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#12 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 1,297
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Quote:
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