Homemade Guitars Showcase
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Mike McBride
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Homemade Guitars Showcase
I am starting this thread so folks can show their homemade guitars.
I am planning to build a low buck 8 or 10 string.
Please also show converted guitars like 6's turned into 8's etc.
I am planning to build a low buck 8 or 10 string.
Please also show converted guitars like 6's turned into 8's etc.
Last edited by Mike McBride on 14 May 2008 5:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Roman Sonnleitner
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OK, here we go:
My first, a 6-stting made from African mahogany/khaya wood & maple fretboard, Seymour Duncan P90 pickup:

My second build: 8-string, same kind of wood for the body, zebrano wood for the accents on the body, Jason Lollar Chicagos Steel pickup at the bridge, Vintage Vibe Guitars Stringmaster-type Pickup in the neck position:

My first, a 6-stting made from African mahogany/khaya wood & maple fretboard, Seymour Duncan P90 pickup:

My second build: 8-string, same kind of wood for the body, zebrano wood for the accents on the body, Jason Lollar Chicagos Steel pickup at the bridge, Vintage Vibe Guitars Stringmaster-type Pickup in the neck position:

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Mike McBride
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Bernard Beck
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- Location: Paris France
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Rocky Hill
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- Location: Prairie Village,Kansas, USA
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Mike McBride
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chas smith R.I.P.
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I really appreciate the guitars made from various woods and I did make a guitar from wood once, but my skills are in metal. This is a titanium (ti 6,4) tube frame with machined aluminum 6061 T-6. It has an 8 string bass neck, 34” and a 12-string neck 24” that has a "birdcage" changer, should I ever think it needs pedals. It weighs 27#.






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Fred Shannon
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Man, George P. I can't wait until the "tone experts" get through working this one over. Well, maybe the wood, no it's in the pickup, probably in the little white box (they're using an A-B switch and some guy in the closet is playing an Emmons Bolt On P/P) through a Sarno box and an Evans amp. (Guess this little number puts some of the "sperts" ideas in the fridge.)
phred
phred
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Bill Creller
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Mike McBride
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Keith Wells
- Posts: 34
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- Location: South Carolina Sea Islands
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I can do that!Mike McBride wrote:
Let's see some crude ones too!

Mahogany body, brass nut and bridge, DeArmand 2000 pickup, stainless cover plate covers almost entire body. 22 1/2 inch scale.

The Headstock is kinda funny looking. My idea was to remove only enough material as necessary to install the tuners and strings. The headstock is a full inch thick.
Overall a pretty rough guitar, but it's working well.
I'm building an electric violin now and want to start another steel soon.
-- Keith
-- Keith
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Bill Hatcher
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Here is a project that I need to finish one day before Haleys Comet comes back.
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David Venzke
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I don't think this is crude, but it is pretty plain jane...

A piece of poplar with a 1" x 3/4 oak stiffener running down the length of the back. Angle aluminum at both ends. An Altoids tin for a resonator with a $3 Radio Shack piezo buzzer inside the tin acting as an acoustic pickup that's wired to the 1/4" jack in the side of the tin. Bridge is a bolt with the head sawed off and square nuts on each end. $8.00 tuners at the head end. The most expensive piece is the real rosewood fretboard and nickel-silver frets. I had less than $20 into this before I added that fretboard.
It is 25" scale and the string spacing is the same as my reso. I carry this in the back seat of my car and play it during breaks and lunch time -- great way to get in at least an hour a day.
-Dave

A piece of poplar with a 1" x 3/4 oak stiffener running down the length of the back. Angle aluminum at both ends. An Altoids tin for a resonator with a $3 Radio Shack piezo buzzer inside the tin acting as an acoustic pickup that's wired to the 1/4" jack in the side of the tin. Bridge is a bolt with the head sawed off and square nuts on each end. $8.00 tuners at the head end. The most expensive piece is the real rosewood fretboard and nickel-silver frets. I had less than $20 into this before I added that fretboard.
It is 25" scale and the string spacing is the same as my reso. I carry this in the back seat of my car and play it during breaks and lunch time -- great way to get in at least an hour a day.
-Dave
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Mike McBride
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I really enjoy seeing the ingenuity you folks have used. I am taking notes and accumulating parts.
I have 12 new Grover tuners and a board off of a shipping pallet. I have some 8 1/2" x 11" plastic dividers out of a 3 ring binder that are pretty thin and can be easily cut to size to make a pickguard.
I plan to secure a used George L pickup for use on this guitar.
I grew up on a small farm where being frugal was considered mandatory. I anticipate my total costs when complete at under $100.
I have 12 new Grover tuners and a board off of a shipping pallet. I have some 8 1/2" x 11" plastic dividers out of a 3 ring binder that are pretty thin and can be easily cut to size to make a pickguard.
I plan to secure a used George L pickup for use on this guitar.
I grew up on a small farm where being frugal was considered mandatory. I anticipate my total costs when complete at under $100.
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Phill Martin
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CrowBear Schmitt
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Mike McBride
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Jim Cohen
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CrowBear Schmitt
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Bill Creller
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Jim Pitman
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Acoustic lap steel
Bernard Beck,
I've always been intrigued by acoustic lap steels w/o resonator.
How does it sound unamplified?
Is it loud enough unamplified to compete w/other acoustic instruments?
I've always been intrigued by acoustic lap steels w/o resonator.
How does it sound unamplified?
Is it loud enough unamplified to compete w/other acoustic instruments?
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Jim Pitman
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Here's somehting I posted a couple of weeks ago. The complete thread is
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=133232
Unfinished:

With finish:

http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=133232
Unfinished:

With finish:














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