Saturday, 13 February 2016

A full week making banjos (and a uke)

Ive just had a whole week off work just to spend time working on my recent commisions. This was the result:

1920s Vega neck







Headstock overlay cut and thicknessed. Dowel rod cut and fitted and the hole in the pot has been adjusted and squared up. Dowel rod glued into neck and then lined up and fitted to pot. Headstock over lay glued to headstock then carving commences... theres a banjo neck in there somewhere.



A maple neck for a cookie tin banjo had its fretboard slots cut then glued on. I also cut the headstock angle but forgot to take photos of it.


 

I made this funky little marking tool to mark out the depth of cut for the binding the cut the bidning by hand using a chisel. A bit of a long winded job and to be honest i made a bit of a hash of it but good to start from the begining to learn fully about how the wood works in different directions and hows best to sharpen your chisels. Ive also started binding it using strips of maple and walnut veneer... once again i forgot to take pictures of this process.







On the last day i got another commission for a gourd banjo. This is how i mark out for cutting the top off. Its going to be fully fretted (my first fretted gourd) and i will be using Pegheds tuning pegs.

I also started work on my next 12" rim walnut neck banjo. This will be fretless with brass fingerboard, full handmade brass hardware, Sakura inspired shell inlay on the headstock... Its gonna be a cracker! Unfortunately once again i forgot to take pictures so your all going to have to wait and see.






Tuesday, 9 February 2016

1920s Vega

Here are some progress pics of a walnut neck im making to fit a 1920s vega pot.


Starting off with some reclaimed walnut laminated with a maple-fumed oak-maple centre stripe stripe



This is the jig i use to cut the heel radius. Its a bit awkward and inefficient so im going to develop it sometime soon.

This is the jig i use for cutting the peghead angle on my new table saw.





A quick check of algignment. Also on the bench are an Appalachian mountain banjo and coockie tin banjo.




Gluing and capping the carbon fibre tension rod.




Gluing on the fretboard




Sanding the peghead overlay to correct thickness using my home made thickness sander.




Hand planing the tapered dowel rod.



Fitting the dowel rod wa time consuming and tricky due to the fact that the holes on the old pot had previously been somewhat butchered




finally, it took the best part of a day, the neck and pot are together.


Tuesday, 2 February 2016

"Old Timer" Appalachian mountain banjo finished


 Just finished this. Appalachian mountain banjo No 8 "Old Timer" model made from reclaimed English elm for the pot and 500 year old Oak (from a barn in Eastern Europe) for the neck.