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My Homemade Guitar

I built a guitar between high school and undergrad. I modelled it after the Ibanez JS Guitars (which I finally got to see in person a few years later!), but I designed it as a neck-through using a prefabricated neck (truss rod, fretboard, frets already placed for me) and elected for some non-standard wiring.

This isn’t comprehensive documentation of the process, but something like it would have been enough to convince high-school-me that my ambition wasn’t foolhardy (indeed, I consider the result a resounding success).

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Figure 1: Mid-way through routing cavities for the pickups and Floyd Rose-style bridge: Two basswood wings from a local hardwood supplier have already been married to the maple neck with a borrowed biscuit joiner.
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Figure 2: The outline of the body and has been cut using a bandsaw at the UCSB woodshop.
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Figure 3: Home on break: Shaping the body with a wood rasp and files.
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Figure 4: Back at school: Applying one of multiple Danish oil coats.
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Figure 5: Cavities in the back are concealed by rosewood covers: Faraday shielding for the lower cavity is provided by a heavy gauge aluminum foil. The wiring is non-standard but allows me to toggle between series and parallel wiring (connecting the neck and bridge pickups), fade out the bridge pickup in either wiring, toggle a coil-tap on both humbuckers simultaneously, and control the master volume.
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Figure 6: Final result after hardware installation, set-up, wiring, and tuning.

I’m not as talented a guitarist as I’d like to be, but I’ve been completely happy with the results of this build. A little heavy, perhaps, but I have no complaints about comfort, tone, or looks. :)