Category Archives: guitar

Almost kept it for myself

A friend who plays a Les Paul wanted some info on a strat. I reccomended a MIM standard. They run around $300 on craigslist. I found this 2007 with a hardshell case for $300, still has buffing compound under the frets and plastic on the pickguard. I owned it for a day!

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Mullard Caps

Experimenting a bit with the tone cap on a strat. Just received an order of Mullard “tropical fish” .039uF caps. The value is in-between the standard Fender .022uF and Gibson .047uF. Should be an interesting experiment. I’ll be dropping them in next week.


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Snowday Stomp Box II – Protoboard!

I’ve been looking at several schematics for stomp boxes and I like the idea of a prototype platform geared towards guitar effects. Inspired by ZZZZZZZ I wanted to build a self contained breadboard with easy access to 1/4″ IO and an assortment of switches and potentiometers.
Here’s the results:
Roadmap

Gut Shot

The potentieometers will feed the headers on this protoboard along with the 4 dip switches shown

Here is the completed 5 pot + 1 spdt switch box

I ebayed a couple new breadboards, I’ll post new pics when the project starts coming together.

My Relic Manifesto

People debate the aesthetic of a relic guitar. Some take offense from an ethical standpoint, battle scars should be earned not purchased. Why pretend to be something your not. There are also those who don’t care for a beat up guitar.

Last year I spend a semester in a class titled “What is Art” and you guessed it, we spent 18 weeks defining and discussing the definition of art. Here’s what I got from the class – two graduate hours I needed for my masters, a bill for $550, an $80 textbook that I’ll never look at again, and a better understanding of the role art play in peoples lives. (I feel like I got ripped off. That’s almost five saga kits). The value of art is personal, when that value is shared by many it can become valuable. So when I think valuable, I think about builders like Callahan and Glendale. I think we can all agree that is artwork with frets . The giggling guy on youtube with an angel grinder and a squire strat has created art, but how many will value it. Once again value is highly personal. If I presented my wife with a blue daisy rock guitar and a butterscotch Glendale tele, she would choose the daisy in a heartbeat, its blue. Its all about value.

Here’s why I value a relic guitar.

I bought a 335 custom shop when I was 19, I cost $1800, my life savings at the time. It was a beautiful and flawless guitar; I was scared to play it for fear of a scratch. I was almost relieved when I sold it two years later. On a shiny guitar a nick in the finish becomes a beacon flashing in my periphery. A relic instrument takes the sting out of a small bump or nick in the finish. I can feel comfortable playing and focus on the music not my proximity to a cymbal stand or a drunk bass player. Reality check here, I should replace cymbal and bass player with laundry basket and wagging dog tail, but you get the picture.

I don’t mind reading fiction. A story doesn’t have to be true to be amazing. Objects, especially guitars, tell a story. A lot of instruments say “I am an exceptional instrument; I was produced by a cnc milling machine capable of maintaining a tolerance of…” I prefer an instrument that says something along the lines of “I was playing in a bar just north of Toledo the night you were born, I broke a string halfway through the second set..”

Ultimately, I just like the patina of old stuff. I live in an old house, I collect antiques. Old things make us think of our history and give the world a little sense of scale.

Ok too much typing I need another guitar to build.