Building an Acoustic Guitar with

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#Luthier #howto #acoustic
I help people find the right guitar faster. Download my course guitar-hunter.teachable.com
Check out Showalter Guitars
showalterguitars.com
follow them on Instagram
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Buy the Guitar Hunter’s Buying Guide 2021
www.jeremytheguitarhunter.com...
Guitars for Sale and Merch:
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Do you want to talk to me? Schedule a video call and we’ll hang!
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Do you want to mail me something?
Jeremy the Guitar Hunter
PO Box 773
Harrisonburg, VA 22803
What gear did you use to record this?
Here are links to my recording gear:
1. Apollo Twin: imp.i114863.net/P0KJWe
2. Royer R10: imp.i114863.net/e4qybO
3. EV RE20 Podcast Mics: imp.i114863.net/151nz9
4. Gator Frameworks XLR Boom stand: imp.i114863.net/151nz9
5. Kali LP6 Monitors: imp.i114863.net/zayZOr
6. Gator Frameworks Monitor stands: imp.i114863.net/Ea9rA2
7. Primacoustic London 12 Room Kit: imp.i114863.net/yRyJo3
My essential gear(affiliate links below)
Buy a copy of the Vintage Guitar Price Guide 2021:
amzn.to/3rGmfME
10’ Ernie Ball Cable
imp.i114863.net/knnPV
30’ Ernie Ball Coiled Cable
imp.i114863.net/eooxQ
Primetone 1.0mm Picks
imp.i114863.net/G66Y2
My favorite Acoustic Guitar Strings, D’Addarrio Nickel Bronze Light Top, Medium Bottom
imp.i114863.net/Zkkez
Favorite Electric Guitar Strings: Ernie Ball Slinky’s
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One Spot Power Adapter Kit
imp.i114863.net/0rrBN
Fishman ToneDEQ
imp.i114863.net/KeJLj9
LR Baggs Venue DI
imp.i114863.net/2PPBA
LR Baggs Session DI
imp.i114863.net/vLLgL
Fender Acoustic SFXii
imp.i114863.net/oeyaWY
Fishman Artist 30:
imp.i114863.net/JrKzRa
LR Baggs Synapse Personal PA
imp.i114863.net/NddY1
Must-Have Guitar Toolkit:
Dunlop String Winder
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Wirecutters for cutting Strings
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Snark Tuner
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Paige Guitar Capo
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EBL 4 Bay 9V Lithium ion Battery Charger with 4 Packs Rechargeable Batteries
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Screwdriver Set
amzn.to/2Vt8gtg

Пікірлер: 37

  • @rdfroman129
    @rdfroman129 Жыл бұрын

    I’m the lucky guy on the phone with these two fellas. A little personal back story, I have owned hundreds and hundreds of guitars in the last 20 years. As an honored owner of a Showalter guitar, I can WITHOUT QUESTION tell you this is THE GREATEST guitar I have ever owned. To top it off, I was able to buy from THE Guitar Hunter. I’m blessed to be included in the Showalter Guitar family and geeking out over being able to talk with you both! Cheers Gentlemen!!

  • @staleyexplores

    @staleyexplores

    Жыл бұрын

    awesome, enjoy!

  • @jeffsquires6620
    @jeffsquires6620 Жыл бұрын

    To build your own guitar is a dream. To build it with great people is a blessing.

  • @AndreRMeyer
    @AndreRMeyer Жыл бұрын

    growing up in the outskirts of Cincinnati, OH, we had a number of Osage orange trees (Maclura pomifera) out back, behind the house, adjoining the woods. The climate here in Basle Switzerland allows for them to grow here as well. Being a (retired) nurseryman, I came across one or two them, one was taken down due to construction, the other grew in a hedge like setting. I'll have to go and check if that one is still around. Greetings from the sunny climes of Basle, Switzerland. P.S. I love watching Steve and you, and the joy that brings across, encompasses. What a gift to be in possession of an insrument, built in that manner, environment.

  • @abeellis4470
    @abeellis4470 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! I want to meet you and Steve. A labor of love of guitars and the beautiful music they make; but also the aesthetically pleasing piece of art that they are.

  • @MrDaveKC
    @MrDaveKC Жыл бұрын

    That's fascinating and how tedious the details are, but oh, they're so important. I find myself continually learning every episode and hopefully one day I'll be able to do it myself. Again thanks Steve & Jeremy.

  • @billirvin3442
    @billirvin3442 Жыл бұрын

    I am really enjoying watching the guitar building series with you and Steve. I like all the native hardwoods that Steve uses in his guitars. Steve is a wealth of knowledge and a mater of his craft. Cant wait till the next episode.

  • @nicholassmith2140
    @nicholassmith2140 Жыл бұрын

    This for me, is by far the most interesting series of videos on KZread.

  • @kandlekulish1484
    @kandlekulish1484 Жыл бұрын

    I am enjoying this series so much! Going to have to save up for my own Showalter. Thanks for bringing us along.

  • @scottfishkind5335
    @scottfishkind5335 Жыл бұрын

    Another great episode! Just amazing the endless subtle details required to build a guitar! It has really given me another level of appreciation for the many processes that have gone into my guitars, at every level, even if most of those are assisted by technology and done in a factory setting. The result is still amazing! But it also shows why handmade, boutique guitars are as expensive as they are, and should be!

  • @davidgillespie7954
    @davidgillespie7954 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you guys!! So cool!

  • @Ditch1221
    @Ditch1221 Жыл бұрын

    Coming along nicely. Can’t wait to hear it.

  • @CMRWoodworks
    @CMRWoodworks Жыл бұрын

    Whoa, a piece of “the tree”! Really cool. Pucker factor will be high cutting into that piece!

  • @adampizarro6169
    @adampizarro6169 Жыл бұрын

    Love this! Been enjoying this series. Great content!! Keep it up

  • @staleyexplores
    @staleyexplores Жыл бұрын

    12:50 where he's carving the neck is the best part, look at those growth rings in the neck, so cool

  • @davidthursfield8833
    @davidthursfield8833 Жыл бұрын

    Watching a master craftsman at work- 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 Steve

  • @barryemerson3526
    @barryemerson3526 Жыл бұрын

    Like so many have said before me, I’m really enjoying this video series. So much knowledge is being shared in the making of his guitar.

  • @copperhead573
    @copperhead573 Жыл бұрын

    Master level lesson

  • @revivalmusic8063
    @revivalmusic8063 Жыл бұрын

    I will be sad when this series is over.

  • @jordanchastain5132
    @jordanchastain5132 Жыл бұрын

    After watching all of these videos and seeing how much work goes into this it baffles me how some companies can sell acoustic guitars for so cheap. I know they’re mostly machine made but still I feel like there’s a ton of manual labor that goes into it regardless

  • @jeremysuggs8345
    @jeremysuggs8345 Жыл бұрын

    So with you on the super glue bro! Grodiest feeling ever😂

  • @aaronelcock3619

    @aaronelcock3619

    Жыл бұрын

    I always use sandpaper to get it off! You might sand through a little skin, but that's a risk I'm willing to take.

  • @staleyexplores
    @staleyexplores Жыл бұрын

    mahogany fretboard? how interesting, then add to that it's "the Tree"....dang, so cool, Steve's creativity is unmatched and he makes guitars in flipflops.

  • @KipH57
    @KipH57 Жыл бұрын

    So cool what you and Steve Re doing together. I have always dreamed of building my own. I’m one of those that played as a youngster. Garage band and all in jr. high and high school. Was never very good simply because as a kid I wasn’t willing to put the time into practice. I haven’t touched a guitar in 25 years. I just turned 65 and am fairly serious about buy an acoustic/electric. Love that OM cutaway look. 2 things- do you have an opinion on what the single best guitar-for-the-money is in the $500 to $1000 range? Second thing- Dude, you have to wear eye protection when using the power equipment in the shop. A splinter in the eye is much more life-altering than the finger burn you got on the belt sander. Thanks for the videos and this series. Really great stuff.

  • @rzh3443
    @rzh3443 Жыл бұрын

    Really neat router jig! I also enjoyed his explanation about glues he uses. Those old hide glues were finicky and almost impossible to soften with steam or heat. Be interesting to see if the new protein glues eventually get universal use for some of the assembly.

  • @carlosreira2189

    @carlosreira2189

    Жыл бұрын

    Is that true about hide glue? If so, that suggests they added something, maybe urea formaldehyde for water resistance. But I'm not really experienced with old guitars. Furniture factories used hide glue for a long time.

  • @rzh3443

    @rzh3443

    Жыл бұрын

    @@carlosreira2189 Hi. I am not the glue expert, per se, but hide glue was pretty much the standard woodworking glue until after WW2. My guess is that formulations were not exact at that time. There are threads that question the transferability of sound through aliphatic resin glues (more “gooey”) but I think it’s like claiming to hear 20,000 HZ through a stereo. Mr. S is correct that planning for a neck reset is a good idea and heat is best , and really only, way to loosen the glue. Factories (and amateurs) use titebond because it has a much longer set up time. Hide glue doesn’t store and if not bonded and clamped in a minute or so, it is worthless as adhesive. Not sure what the comparison is to the new fish glues like Taylor uses. Traditionalists want the closest thing to the original and they will argue all the needs for the exact materials used pre WW2. And then there is the whole bolt- on versus dovetail neck argument…..

  • @carlosreira2189

    @carlosreira2189

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rzh3443 Yeah, thanks for that reply. These days, even Elmer's white glue is really hard. I don't think it's a make or break sonic issue, but I've made a few guitars, some with hide glue neck joints and some with yellow, and I've taken some of them apart. Neither is great, but yellow glue was a steamy mess. They suggest no moisture soldering iron methods now. I'm a believer in the bolt on neck, though I have yet to make one. It's smart and proven at this point. Fish glue is interesting. My understanding is that most if not all is made by one company and I have a bucket of it. It dries hard but is very reversible. The best is Sturgeon bladder glue and that's super expensive. Violin makers use it. There's some other options, though untested, like dextrin glue or other carbohydrate based glues. I often mix wheat flour into my Elmer's to make a thick paste. It dries rock hard and is fairly resistant to moisture. So...yeah adhesives, fun. Blessings of success with your creative endeavors.

  • @carlosreira2189
    @carlosreira2189 Жыл бұрын

    Looks like you gentleman are using all domestic species, and locally available at that. I notice the sycamore top, very cool. I'm sure tulip poplar would make good tops, but maybe not the most exotic looking. How do you thickness a hardwood top, same or less than spruce? Or thicker?

  • @AndreRMeyer

    @AndreRMeyer

    Жыл бұрын

    @Carlos Reira Recording King uses whitewood, Liriodendron tulipifera, for the back and sides of the ROST-7-TS Tenor Guitar.

  • @karelenhenkie666
    @karelenhenkie6668 ай бұрын

    So you cant setup the jig to cut the bottom of the dovetail?

  • @staleyexplores
    @staleyexplores Жыл бұрын

    glue logic is sound imho

  • @keestoft250
    @keestoft250 Жыл бұрын

    Ali McGraw..... It's been bugging me this whole series then it came to me. Joyce reminds me of her?

  • @canajian
    @canajian Жыл бұрын

    👀👋😎👍

  • @frankcarter6427
    @frankcarter6427 Жыл бұрын

    presumably, all that skill and knowledge is redundant in the age of CNC - do the big company's machines get the joints more or less right every time?

  • @coolcreamykiwi
    @coolcreamykiwi6 ай бұрын

    I wouldnt step foot in a shop without propper dust extraction on sanders

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