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Moving the holes around

6/20/2018

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This kit has some problems.  It's nothing that can't be fixed, but it will require some work to straighten out.  I knew going into this project that I wasn't just going to bolt this thing together and call it done.  It would be almost unusable if I tried that.

The first thing I focused on was the neck.  I knew if it wasn't right, the rest of the project was never going to work out.  So I made sure it was flat, and I leveled all of the frets, re-crowned them, and polished them.  I also had to dress all of the fret ends so they weren't' sharp.  Out of the box, they were like little razors.

Once that was done, I bolted the body to the neck and checked for fitment issues.  There were many.

Picture
You can see above where the neck doesn't look straight.  It's actually not bad, but there was this little section of the neck pocket that was milled out deeper than the rest.  I'd prefer this to be straight, but it will be covered by the pickguard, so I'm not too worried.

The blue lines are the edges of the neck - I used a straightedge to extend those lines down past the pickups to address another issue outlined below.

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The kit manufacturer thoughtfully pre-drilled all of my holes for me.  Wonderful!  Except quite a few of them were wrong. Bummer.

The cutouts for the pickups (that big oblong hole above) are fine, but the four holes with the red arrows are the problem.  They mount the bridge to the body, and the strings and bridge pickup are all connected to it.  If I use those holes, the bridge is crooked, and too far over to one side.

Here's what the bridge looks like mounted:
Picture
Notice how far over it is to the left.  With the strings installed it looks even worse.  And there are issues with the strings not lining up on the neck OR over the pickup.  The neck is actually bolted on straight to the centerline of the body, and the pickup holes routed in the body line up fine, it's just that bridge plate that's not lined up properly.  Oh, and the input jack, too.
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Here is the hole for the input jack. Notice the mounting screw holes are off quite a bit as well.  Here's what that looks like with the input jack plate installed:
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Yep, that's pretty crooked.
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With the jack plat on straight, only one hole lines up.  It's time to move some holes.

Unfortunately, I lost the pics from this step.  But what I did was put a little wood glue and a toothpick in each hole that was wrong.  I let them dry overnight, then sanded the toothpick down so that it was flush with the body.  You can see the results here:
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You can see that the holes are now filled.  I also filled all of the holes for the pickguard, but more on that later.  I could now line up the plates correctly, and drill new holes, like so:
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You can see that the holes didn't need to move much, but that still makes a big difference.  the strings now line up with the bridge and pickup, and go straight down the neck instead of veering off to the side.
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You can also see in the above picture that all of the pickguard holes are filled and sanded.  I'm switching pickguards, and the new one has holes in all different places.  But I'll cover that later.
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