![]() When the glue is applied everything wants to skate around (remember that). I've got a big block of wood that everything is clamped to and there is a piece at the end of the headstock to keep it from slipping forward. Here the headstock is being glued to the neck stick. Basically it looks like this - the headstock is a piece of wood that has the grain running lengthwise - basically a board. OK, I asked Marvel to post this as a new thread so it wouldn't get bogged down in some other stuff, Stuck my spare Floyd on it, cleaned it up and made a tidy profit. Either way, I figured £50 was still pretty good for what it was, plus I managed to score a Randy Rhoads copy sans bridge on my way out for a tenner. I mean, the friend I got it from was a moron and had no idea what he was talking about, insisting that it was a genuine MIA 1957 model, but then quoted me £50 as he "just wanted it gone". If I recall (I really don't know my Danelectro models), it was one of these.Ī Danelectro U2? It was definitely a reissue and struck me as a MIK. In all, he says it was a pretty neat gift. Neither of us have tackled something like this, but the price for the Danelectro was too good to pass up since it's exactly the kind of thing my old man loves and he enjoys a bit of guitar DIY even more. It's my dad's project, but I think he's a bit apprehensive about fixing the neck. This isn't the Danelectro that needs fixing (I don't have the guitar in my possession, it lives with my old man), but the scarf joint has essentially done this:
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