More words of warning. Bitterroot sells two different kinds of truss rods that work in both directions. I see their images are copyrighted so I will not attach one, but here is the link to their site.
https://www.bitterrootguitars.com/ The image of the two different truss rods are on the first page of the site.
Everything I have been writing and all that follows refers to what they call the "dual action" truss rod - the one where the hex nut is fixed and welded directly to the active rod. Their other rod, the "two-way" rod
might have slightly different dimensions to the adjuster nut and it
might have slightly different depth and diameter requirements. I don't know - I've only used the dual action rods.
First, in all of the talk so far we have described routing the channel for the truss rod when the neck blank was still basically a rectangular board, and we were using one edge of the board as our registration edge against the router table fence. Well we don't always have that luxury, especially for guys like me, who are, like my father before me, a touch "thrifty." I like to get as many pretty necks as I can out of a nice piece of wood and may crowd them in like cutting biscuits on rolled out dough.
In this case I go ahead and cut out the neck and profile it first. Then I double stick it to a piece of 1/4 hardboard, with the centerline of the neck aligned to a reference mark on the hardboard that is parallel to both sides of the hardboard.
The main use of this hardboard plate is to sit in my fret cutting miter box and keep the profiled neck centerline perpendicular to the fret saw, but I use it for two other purposes:
1) to cut the nut slot, which I make on my table saw since its blade leaves a 1/8" kerf. I just set the blade to the desired depth of the nut slot and make a single pass with the hardboard plate registered against my table saw crosscut sled. Then, I lay out the fret slots and cut them by hand.
2) But before any of that I also use it to register against the router table if I need to rout for a truss rod in a neck that is already profiled as a result of my "thriftiness." So this process, though ideally done on the neck board before it is profiled, need not be and will still work fine if you just create a reference edge parallel to the neck centerline.
Now to set up the router table. I recommend anyone doing truss rod work on the router table view Fletch's great video tutorial here:
He starts the router table stuff at about 6:28. I use his techniques to lay out and mark the start/stop cut line on the table an neck. If using my hardboard plate as described above, I already have the reference marks permanently inked onto the board.
Once you have set the router fence and marked the start and stop cut references, just (for the Bitterroot Dual Action Rod) set the depth of cut to 3/8" and use the router's plunge settings to secure that depth. I rout a couple test slots on a scrap board to double check that it's just right to fit the rod just a hair below flush. Then, save that test board as a future reference to setting the router depth. I use a 1/4" spiral up cut bit (Freud #75102) for this cut but any bit that cuts a flat bottomed 1/4" slot can be used. The 5/32" radius core box is the only other bit needed. The depth for that rout needs to be a bit more than 3/8" as the bottom of the nut on the "dual action" rod is about .025 lower than the bottom of the minimum acceptable flat bottomed rout for the rod itself. I recommend about .425 deep for the core box rout. this gives you just enough clearance all around the edges of the adjuster nut that you can get some finish buildup un the access slot and it'll still turn fine.
So while you are setting up these depths and test cuts on your scrap board, go ahead and create a clone of the final 10-12 inches of the rout. It'll end up looking like this:
The rod is in backwards here just testing the depth for that section.
Once it is all the right size, go ahead and make a shallow cut on the end of your test board that will serve as a future reference for easily setting the depth of the core box cut. Save this board - it now allows quick set-up of both bits.
Now cut it on your neck itself. DO NOT try to cut it to full depth in one pass. I do three passes, deepening each to sneak back up to the final depth I already set and locked in on the plunge settings during the test cuts.
This is a lot of words but it is actually very easy. Only two bits are needed. You can do it on an already profiled neck if you make a reference plate to double-stick it to. Turns out pretty classy looking. Heel adjust would be a lot easier but that's a pain to use unless you use a spoke wheel, and if that's your plan just follow everything Fletch shows in his video.
Questions? Let me know.
Comments, especially room for improvement, please post.
Cheers,
Rex