Home Depot Pine 2x4 Guitar!?!?!?

FULLY PLAYABLE!! FULL OPTIONS!! No sacrifices to playability and function!! A proof of concept build and successful experiment so far.
Be on the look out for a second video for a director's cut version with more information about the process.
Link coming soon for the director's cut version with commentary.
This video is simply a follow along.
Done for the #two2x4challenge for the Modern Makers Podcast. Done just as a complete experiment and proof of concept. I am extremely curious how this guitar will age. Time will tell!
Thank You! Like and subscribe!
Attention!
You are responsible for your own actions, and any video on this channel is intended for entertainment purposes only. I, or the DaveyDacusGuitars channel are not responsible for any damage done to instruments, or any harm done to you using a technique that use. Using any power tool is inherently dangerous and you are responsible for knowing and understanding how to safely operate them. This channel and myself assume absolutely no responsibility for actions you take.

Пікірлер: 112

  • @jakespade3227
    @jakespade32273 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed how the knot on the fretboard is at the 12th fret, slick!!

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!! Back up plan!! I planned end grain block inlays to match the endgrain body. In case I decided against that I lined that knot up with the 12th. Don't remember at this point if I pointed that out elsewhere or not.

  • @mozarth
    @mozarth5 жыл бұрын

    Oh wow. I would've never thought I could be warm to the idea of a pine guitar... This is good.

  • @vincentkoster6291
    @vincentkoster62916 жыл бұрын

    I think the grain on the fingerboard looks absolutely beautiful!

  • @74dartman13
    @74dartman136 жыл бұрын

    Such a cool build! I couldn't stop watching! I love how you created the grain pattern in the body...awesome! Hope ya don't mind if I borrow that idea some day. Been thinking of making a pine body and buying a maple neck. It sounds great and I hope it ages well for you! Btw...I believe Leo Fender made pine bodies when he first started making solid body guitars! Thanks for the cool video! Good luck!

  • @thewindsorproject796
    @thewindsorproject7964 жыл бұрын

    LOVE the end grain top! Do more of that!!! Diamonds, Triangles, Stars, mixed woods, etc

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    4 жыл бұрын

    Everyone that sees this guitar says that! It's different for sure. Thank you for watching!

  • @Brandywine6969
    @Brandywine69696 жыл бұрын

    Everyone around says you can't make a pine guitar without it being too weak, too this, or too that. Pine is gorgeous wood. This guitar is amazing. I love it. You did a great job with it.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much! It does have some quirks, but as proof of concept... Yep! It definitely works! The pine neck gives some characteristics that are unique, things that I've never experienced with any other guitar. I hope to have time soon to do an update video now that the guitar has aged for about 6-7 months.

  • @Brandywine6969

    @Brandywine6969

    6 жыл бұрын

    I would love to see that. I look forward to it.

  • @salmonti9707

    @salmonti9707

    2 жыл бұрын

    Leo Fender's first guitars were pine. Today they would be worth a fortune to the nuts out there who just like to collect things

  • @anond2015
    @anond20156 жыл бұрын

    Very cool. Inspiring!

  • @AndyCPugh
    @AndyCPugh7 жыл бұрын

    Awesome build.

  • @Ibaneddie76
    @Ibaneddie765 жыл бұрын

    Great job man I'm a custom guitar builder so I know what it takes to build a good instrument and you did fantastic. Keep up the great work and lets see another guitar build,

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! I wish I could dedicate more time to this now, hopefully soon I'll be able to get back in my shop more.

  • @davidrussell8918
    @davidrussell89185 жыл бұрын

    Really nice build, great tone. Ive built 2 pine teles, 1solid pine, 1 with a spalted sycamore top, they both sound great. Pine is a Great sounding wood. Nice warm tone. That pine neck is a little scary, carbon fiber rods would have been a good idea. Or do The Billy Gibbons thing, and use the lightest strings you can find.lol.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! I choose not to add any reinforcement, I seriously wanted to know what would happen. It's had 10s on it for over a year now. There is a failure slowly but surely occurring in the neck joint, but that's partially my fault, combined with the bodies grain orientation. The neck itself is doing just fine. It reacts a ton to temp change and humidity. Like a TON. The neck is touchy as well, by that I mean it takes every small push of your hand backwards or forward. You have to really watch the fretting hand or you'll sound out of tune, mostly pulling it sharp backwards to you while play. But tune it up, play for a couple hours, does just fine. It's a real conversation starter. Its hanging in the music store I teach it, real conversation starter.

  • @FrankOlsonTwins
    @FrankOlsonTwins5 жыл бұрын

    Really great tone! Nice work.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @mentalswill
    @mentalswill6 жыл бұрын

    Well done.

  • @simonfyfe6305
    @simonfyfe63055 жыл бұрын

    Nice job buddy. I’m going to make myself one of these. Sounds really good to 👍

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Have at it! It's a very fun process I hope you enjoy!

  • @oqsy
    @oqsy5 жыл бұрын

    AWESOME. Pine endgrain has always looked good to me. If pine were more uniform in hardness, I think it would take over as an electric guitar wood. Classy and inviting look but fickle as can be to shape precisely. Gorgeous work! I understand the constraints of the build and the novelty of an all-pine 2x4 guitar. The following is in no way a criticism ;) Just some ideas that popped into my head for those considering replicating this with all pine: 1. look into cactus juice stabilizer + vacuum pump for the fretboard 2. 3-piece neck with opposing grain to equalize stresses 3. truss rod AND carbon fiber rods to further stiffen neck 4. bolt-on neck construction with a standard pocket size *just in case* the pine neck needs to be replaced down the road. Swap in a fender spec neck with minimal fitting vs a new glue-in from scratch.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    All good ideas, and I considered 2 of them. I did make sure that the 2 piece neck was made with opposing grain, and made sure they were quarter sawn, also then the extra cut on the band saw was to ensure that the fretboard was nicely quarter sawn as well. I didn't want to use epoxies or anything else because I was genuinely curious how the wood all on it's own would perform. So I didmt really consider this at all. Its impressed me really how well it's done. I always look for ways to improve, so I'll always mention something I would do different next time, but it's been good overall. The rods for reinforcement I considered. But also I didn't want to maybe be disqualified over that. Not that it matter, I think the guys who did this contest never even saw this guitar. I watched thier summary videos and it was never mentioned or pictured at all so... oh well I guess. Thanks for the comment! And some good solid ideas really if I were to do this again, or if anyone wants to replicate the concept without constraints.

  • @robinleebraun7739
    @robinleebraun77392 жыл бұрын

    Super video. And if it doesn’t work out, you have a cool cutting board.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    2 жыл бұрын

    Video is 4 years old. The guitar has had a few tweaks but over all is still going strong. Thanks for watching!

  • @gyovannirobson
    @gyovannirobson5 жыл бұрын

    Linda guitarra. Parabéns.

  • @evilcowboy
    @evilcowboy5 жыл бұрын

    Very well made, I'd worry a little about the neck warping since pine tends to warp, cup and all sorts of nasty things, but thats just me and it proves at the very least it can be done. Never seen a neck made of pine. Bodies not really a problem but a neck I'd be scared to do it.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thanks!! I've got a 16 mo th update video as well. Showing a few details of how it aged in that amount of time. The neck body joint shows signs of failing, but the neck is pretty stable to this day. If I did it again I would definitely use reinforcement, like a carbon fiber rod or two, and I think it would benefit from a harder material for the finger board for longevity. Other than that it's still a working guitar and always a conversation starter when people see it! Thanks for watching!!

  • @Dilla4life
    @Dilla4life5 ай бұрын

    Yo!!! Killer tone!!!

  • @nokomisnichols
    @nokomisnichols4 жыл бұрын

    good job. looks pretty cool.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @Sam-me5pl
    @Sam-me5pl4 жыл бұрын

    damn dude she is beautiful and screams in a lovely way, such a nice tone

  • @aaronlord1927
    @aaronlord19275 жыл бұрын

    FUUUUUUCKK, those licks in the intro are so badass.

  • @richardmnixon3067
    @richardmnixon30677 жыл бұрын

    oh my god i want it now!!!

  • @madcapmotherrecords6245
    @madcapmotherrecords62455 жыл бұрын

    All I can say is right on man!!!!!!!

  • @gavrilopricip11
    @gavrilopricip115 жыл бұрын

    Me Dacus I’m in love with that shape !!! Brilliant mashup ic a super prs/Paul/godin montreal!!! Do you have a photo gallery of this model??? I want to see more!!!

  • @JamespMusic
    @JamespMusic6 жыл бұрын

    Nice. I like

  • @CarlWinter-oy8uf
    @CarlWinter-oy8uf6 ай бұрын

    Experts agree --wood has no bearing on final tone--its the combination of pickups /strings & amp that delivered 99 % of the tone !

  • @MrStephenlederle
    @MrStephenlederle7 жыл бұрын

    So freakin cool!

  • @E-BikingAdventures
    @E-BikingAdventures5 жыл бұрын

    That is really cool. Sounds good too. I noticed that your neck/fretboard is set quite high above the body.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yeah to be honest this was more or less thrown together. I put in about half the hours of a typical custom build. I was genuinely curious how the pine was going to perform. Sound, stability, all of that. I wasn't as meticulous on details. The plan was to meet the challenge requirements, make a good playing guitar that was fully playable, looks.... I wasn't as concerned with. I thought the end grain thing would be cool, but didn't give other aspects of appearance a ton of thought.

  • @iamseetherfan
    @iamseetherfan6 жыл бұрын

    That was a great video. You created a really nice looking guitar. I really like how you used the end grain and created a very interesting and intricate design to look at. Roughly how many man hours did it take in the total build? I only ask as I have a workshop and it’s been a idea I have had for sometime to make my own guitar. Great job buddy.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    iamseetherfan most guitars I make have around 50-60 hours in them. That could be improved if I optimized things a bit probably. This one took about 30 probably. I was sort of in a rush to meet the deadline for that competition.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033
    @daveydacusguitars90337 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the positive comments!

  • @DanielSilva-mh5vu
    @DanielSilva-mh5vu5 жыл бұрын

    Muito top imagina o som que têm 👏

  • @HALO-JONES
    @HALO-JONES3 жыл бұрын

    You make it look too easy,nice background music aswell ✌

  • @coreyoffman8739
    @coreyoffman873912 күн бұрын

    What would the rosewood neck color be (stained dark brown or mahogany)

  • @tomalexiou9573
    @tomalexiou95733 жыл бұрын

    Hello Davey,Great job on this build! Very enjoyable to watch.Did you cut the body on a 12 inch bandsaw?

  • @bug273
    @bug2735 жыл бұрын

    dude!! your project is amazing! just a thing... it would be beauty if you stack your camera into a tripod, the movement can't lets appreciate your hard work, but anyway, you rules! nice project!

  • @giosai1220
    @giosai12204 жыл бұрын

    Cool build! Planning one I hope I can make one as coolas yours though -Your 900th subscribee

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Good luck with your build! Thank you as well for the sub! I haven't posted in a while but I'm editing a video now, should be out soon.

  • @croc3862
    @croc38626 жыл бұрын

    I would love to do a lp junior out of a 2x4

  • @MYdjANDkaraoke
    @MYdjANDkaraoke6 жыл бұрын

    great video! I can't believe you were able to make 2x4s look so nice. my real question is how you were able to achieve that hollow like sound from the guitar when the vides started? Is it the guitar, the pickups, or amp settings? Its a sound I've been looking for, for a long time. My strats, teles, les pauls, and semi hollows still can't achieve that sound. To me it sounds like an almost hollow not full sound. The closest I've come is a relic strat with most of the finished removed so it practically bare wood. I suspect the open wood allows the body to resonate differently, I think the pine also has something to do with it. I've been looking at pine teles for about a year now and although each sound different, they consistently share that similar tone. Out of curiosity, how much do you charge for an electric tele style guitar made of aged pine, maple neck, rosewood fingerboard? just a general estimate is fine, I'm just wondering what the cost of parting one together vs having you or someone make one would be.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    +MYdjANDkaraoke Hello! Thank you for the comment! I seriously wasn't sure how this thing would turn out! It ended up better than I could have hoped for given the materials I started with. For the sound I'm playing through a Crate vtx-200 solid-state stereo effects amp. I can't remember exactly but it sounds like a bit of delay, reverb, and a slight amount of chorus. The amp is a good solid state amp to hear in person. It has 2 twelve inch speakers, and the effects bounce between the two. Very cool in person. Difficult to reproduce recorded with a single mic. As for the sound you hear however, that may not be exactly what you hear in person. Recording varies greatly, and you might have heard a very different sound had my recording mic been placed just a small bit differently. The pickups in the guitar are some sort of older DiMarzio in the bridge and a Gretch neck pickup that is p90ish. Honestly just some that I had around from a replacement for a customer, they didn't want to take those when I was done putting their new pickups in. The pine neck I believe is quite significant to the sound this guitar has. I suppose the body as well although I think neck construction is more significant. I've played plenty of guitars while repairing and have probably been able to handle a wider variety than most. Pine acts very differently from other woods, probably mainly because it is a soft wood. The only way I know to describe it is kind of a natural compression effect. It's like the soft wood is only going to give you some much. I don't recommend using pine however for a neck without farther reinforcing it. Maybe titanium of carbon fiber support rods as well as the truss rod. This guitar returns to the same state of tuning each time, however playing it on a strap you have to really watch how much force you apply to the neck as it easily pulls sharp or pushes flat. Any custom built guitar I would say you can expect to pay a minimum of $1500-$2000 for the completed guitar with a more simple construction like a flat body tele style. More depending on features like inlays, body carves, or anything else you would want. Parts and materials would be selected better than they were for this build, higher quality pine, higher quality parts and electronics etc.. And many part of this build were quite rushed to meet a deadline. You could likely part one together using modern cnc made necks or bodies for around maybe $500-$700 depending on how high the quality you chose to purchase. For instance an eBay neck vs a Warmoth neck. And you can count on $100-$150 luthiers service for someone to fully assemble the guitar ready for you to use. I think that'd be about the fee in my area which is the southeastern us. And that's buying a prefinished body. If you go the parts caster way Warmoth is top of the line licensed replacement strat and tele parts I would say. Especially necks. They will arrive ready to play. Otherwise allparts, wd, or mighty mite parts tend to be very close in quality, and sometimes require extra fitting, adding to luthier fees later. Such as possibly needing the frets dressed to play buzz free. I wish you luck on your quest for tone!! We are all in search of something!

  • @MYdjANDkaraoke

    @MYdjANDkaraoke

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for getting back to me! I think I have a Crate VTX-200 too, but it has a touchy volume knob and back solder joint so I had to pound it on the top every now and again when the volume cut out. I just keep it around but I haven't played on it in years. That's not a bad price for a custom guitar but I think I'm going to part one out first to see if I even like the sound of the pine guitars. If I decide to go better build after though for the price though, I think I'd rather have you build one than Warmoth. I priced a few on there and after it's all said and done, the prices would be about the same as what your estimates would be.

  • @ivanlitovchenko1840
    @ivanlitovchenko18402 жыл бұрын

    Hey, how's the pine vulture doing? Not twisted, keeps the system?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    2 жыл бұрын

    So the pine is actual doing just fine. I teach guitar and it hangs in the same room I teach in and is sort of a conversation piece. The neck is holding up just fine. No problem at all with the materials. The pitch of the strings however bends very easily with hand movement because the pine bends easily, but it has done that since it's construction. The guitar plays just fine otherwise. It's not a guitar you'd want to play every day but it holds up just fine to occasional use. There was an issue with the neck losing pitch (by pitch I mean the angle it was mounted in the body), but that was my fault and not the fault of the materials. I should have made the joint a bit bigger and maybe a bit deeper as well for more glue surface. I did a repair for that about a year after the instrument was built and that has been holding just fine. Thank you for watching and have a great day

  • @nmssis
    @nmssis5 жыл бұрын

    Hey, I got the same bandsaw...how did you set up your upper blade guard assembly? mine is such a crappy and shifty guide, I feel like taking a hammer to it.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hmmm.... mine is quite sturdy. In fact the guides are a tight friction fit then locked in place with and a hex bolt, and at times they do require a hammer to adjust them. Seriously. They get stuck and need considerable nudging at times. The side guides that is. The back blade guide is a ball bearning type assembly and adjusts quite finely and accurately with a thumb wheel adjustment. My bottom guides are identical to the top ones. Only reversed. Both sets work pretty well for me. As for set up, that depends on the use at the time. Looser blade tension and a little wiggle room in the guides for squirrely cuts. Very close with all guides, but not quite touching, and a bit higher blade tension and a thicker blade for resawing. Hope that helps.

  • @nmssis

    @nmssis

    5 жыл бұрын

    thank you! my unit, when I raise the guide the right bearing touches the blade or when I lower the guide the left touches the blade....and when I tighten to lock in, the unit ever slightly moves right... and is your table square? mine is off...

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Off one direction down, the other direction up... I would say square the table and it'd fix the guide issue... but the guide is mounted to the top of the saw I think, so sqauring the table won't fix the guides... Might have to shim one side or the other or something. Maybe it took a hit over the years. The table on mine is pretty square to the blade. Not 100% sure, but I think it has an adjustment for that as well. Mine is pretty good so I've never messed with it, and actually can't remember if it has the feature or not, but many saws have the tilting feature, you might could find an adjustment for that. Definitely check for the tilting adjustment. An issue the table of my unit.. Mine has a small metal pin that goes in the end, it must be removed to change the blade. But if the pin is left out, the table wraps pretty badly. I've lost track of that pin before and had to deal with that until I found it. When I put the pin back in it flattens back out.

  • @nmssis

    @nmssis

    5 жыл бұрын

    its an adventure, alright....thanks! great guitar btw, unique indeed!

  • @pskemster
    @pskemster5 жыл бұрын

    Was there any particular type of pine,,? Thank you for such a cool build!

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    These literally came from my local home depot. Probably southern yellow pine. I had purchased them for another project but ended up not needing them, not a guitar related project, and they sat in my shop for several months drying and adjusting to my shop environment. I decided to use them for this when I heard about the contest.

  • @3XATHAT
    @3XATHAT5 жыл бұрын

    WoW!!! Nutz :-) AAA

  • @pulaski1
    @pulaski15 жыл бұрын

    Do end-grain blocks have sufficient strength and/or stability? I would have thought that a ½" butcher's block "top" glued to a regular back of around 1" would make a stronger and more stable body.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    It would I believe. This thing was experimental, it's been strong enough I think. But would be stronger the way you suggest.

  • @HopeStreetWoodworks
    @HopeStreetWoodworks5 жыл бұрын

    I've also made a end grain pine body for a bass. Everyone has told me this will never work. You mention that this didn't hold up. Would using a penetrating epoxy like cactus juice that's used for stabilizing wood work to stiffen up the body more?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    It not exactly like it's not lasting.. it's just lost pitch. But then stabilized. No issues recently. It's the small neck pocket causing the issue. I'm sure stabilizing epoxy would help strength, but then you'd have issues with the glue penetrating properly at the neck joint i think. Unless you just epoxied all of it together. Or went with a bolt on design. Sound theory for sure though. Based on my observations here... probably over kill. A properly sized neck joint would be just fine I believe based on how this has acted.

  • @izzysantiago978
    @izzysantiago978 Жыл бұрын

    I'll take a pine body any day but a pine neck is a bit on the frowning side from all the websites I've read because it states that: Of all the pine woods the southern yellow pine may be the hardest but still Pine dents and scratches quite easily. This also means that pine is only suitable for guitar bodies. Pine cracks and bends too easily to use in a neck, and is too soft to be used as a fretboard. This is also why you won't find any acoustic guitars made using pine. how is that neck today after all the use and string tension?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    Жыл бұрын

    So the thing was kind of an experiment anyway. I did take several precautions knowing the limitations of the material. The neck is 2 pieces laminated, 2 quartersawn pieces. As well as a third quartersawn piece for the fingerboard. To answer your question, it's still together and playable. Although it doesn't get a lot of play. It's a conversation piece. It hangs in the room where I teach guitar at a local music store and occasionally it's brought out to show people and be played a bit. A friend of mine did borrow it and take it to a gig one time, played I think 2 songs on it, and it did fine for that. But it was never intended to be sold and used as a finished instrument or anything like that. Although you can still pull it off the wall and tune it up and jam with it any time you want. The neck hasn't warped or catastrophically failed or anything like that. Tuning stability isn't great. Pine moves a lot. That's one the reasons like is used in home building here in north America. Pine is able to move quite a lot and not break, and still support the load it's supposed to hold. It's a bendy sort of word. Which makes the tuning stability a litlle.. squishy. Just the weight of your hand can pull you several cents out of tune if you aren't careful. But it returns to pitch when you let go. But overall it's pretty much just like it was the day I finished it. And it's been tuned to pitch hanging on a wall. It is usually flat when you pull it off the wall though. Very interesting to me as I thought I'd see some sort of warping of major failure, but I haven't.

  • @glennojordan
    @glennojordan5 жыл бұрын

    One tune playing sounds like Why Worry by Dire Straits.

  • @Tracks777
    @Tracks7777 жыл бұрын

    Quite good video, awesome!

  • @dusannikolic4162

    @dusannikolic4162

    6 жыл бұрын

    goood fucing mahagony

  • @TwigNTimberFishingOutdoors
    @TwigNTimberFishingOutdoors5 жыл бұрын

    Did I miss the installation of a truss rod?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Routed the channel early in the video, its glued under the finger board at about 3:50

  • @kerekes1952
    @kerekes19526 жыл бұрын

    What is the song beginning at the 12:00 min. mark?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    Stephen Kerekes All the songs are from the you tube free access library. I had to look it up, it is titled "End of Summer" and the artist is listed as "The 126ers" Thanks for watching!

  • @clemmcguinness1087
    @clemmcguinness10876 жыл бұрын

    Hard work and brilliant result. What does it weigh?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    I'm not near a scale right now, but it's about the as a medium weight American strat. So fairly light. At some point in the future I will do an update video on this thing, it's almost a year old now. I will be sure to include the weight as well.

  • @clemmcguinness1087

    @clemmcguinness1087

    6 жыл бұрын

    DaveyDacusGuitars I'll look forward to that thanks

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    Also thank you for the compliment!

  • @spanner4778
    @spanner47784 жыл бұрын

    How many 2x4s were needed for the body?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    4 жыл бұрын

    I don't remember to be honest. But if you plan correctly I'm pretty sure you can get a body with a single 2x4. Definitely a single 2x6. I cut this into small squares but I've seen endgrain patterns with rectangular shapes as well.

  • @claudioguarnieri1060
    @claudioguarnieri10606 жыл бұрын

    Just a question. You have cut the body without following the wood fibres: does't this method affect the instrument stability? It would be a pity, cause it seems very well done! Nice workflow and nice birds btw ahah!

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    Claudio Guarnieri The entire thing was kind of an experiment in every aspect... but it's been doing just fine! I've seen other commercially sold end grain pattern bodies such as this one, they seem to hold up. For bolt on necks. Like tele bodies and such. The only thing I was worried about, and this could be a possible in the future... is the lack of long grain to long grain connection in the neck pocket.

  • @claudioguarnieri1060

    @claudioguarnieri1060

    6 жыл бұрын

    DaveyDacusGuitars Ah! I suspected this! Thanks 4 the reply friend. Cheers

  • @cramit
    @cramit2 жыл бұрын

    Do you find that over the years the wood has shrunk? I read that building guitars from pine without tempering it will ultimately lead to shrinking of the wood.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    2 жыл бұрын

    So... Those 2 boards came from my local Home Depot, but they sat in my shop for probably 6-8 months before I built the guitar. During the heat of summer, in the rafters, in my un-airconditioned shop. Those boards got toasty up there I'm sure. Construction lumber will generally read about 20% moisture on a meter, but these were fairly light for their size which tells me they were pretty dry at the time I built the guitar. Probably closer to 8-10%. Also the various laminations help prevent wood movement. The body has laminations everywhere, and the neck is 2 pieces quarter sawn for the shaft with a third piece for the fingerboard also selected for the quarter sawn grain. That's the reason for the angled cut on the band saw, for the quarter sawn slice that eventually was the fingerboard. Also a principal of wood working is you get less movement from any species perpendicular to the grain with quarter sawn material. Any reason for that choice. But yes building any thing, furniture, guitars, whatever out of "green" wood will only lead to problems as the moisture leaves the wood. In this case the wood was relatively dry, and also the laminations and grain selection helped to prevent such problems. And yes you are correct. Really bad idea to buy wood from home Depot, bring it home, immediately build something with it. Especially dimensioned construction lumber.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    2 жыл бұрын

    Actually that reverse on the quarter sawn movement. Less movement ALONG the grain. Movement will be perpendicular to the grain. Either way, used in the manner I used it here leads to a more stable neck for a guitar.

  • @cramit

    @cramit

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@daveydacusguitars9033 thank you for the reply! Great video. Great job!

  • @syaefulhaq6478
    @syaefulhaq64785 жыл бұрын

    What is the song beginning at 16:25 min. Please??

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    I have looked and looked and looked but can't find the title or artist for you.. I can tell you it's from the KZread free library for creators. .. but unfortunately that's all I can tell you.... anyone has access to it, and it's free, if you can just find it!! Sorry!!! I've also lost all this data so I can't go back and look it up that way..

  • @jamesstone3767
    @jamesstone37676 жыл бұрын

    Any news on the full length video?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    Um..... hopefully one day I will have time to assemble something more detailed for those interested. All the footage I have remaining however is the current KZread video, so maybe I can just narrate over that for some more details. Or include new footage using the completed guitar... . Eventually I will work something up. Can't really give you a time frame though..

  • @jamesstone3767

    @jamesstone3767

    6 жыл бұрын

    DaveyDacusGuitars that's all good, do you know a good way to seal up that endgrain for a really smooth finish? I want to do a sunburst with stain.

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    6 жыл бұрын

    Usually stain is applied before sealer.. would be very difficult with end grain I think. It's likely to come out very blotchy over a span as big as a guitar body. If you are building something with an end grain body sillmilar and want a burst over it, I'd recommend sealingeverything with basically any sealer, then leveling the sealer, start color coats after, then top coats of gloss or satin, or semi gloss, what ever you choose. The key to the smooth finish thing is building up costs until the top surface is level. End grain is a pain. It's a real finishing nightmare.

  • @jamesstone3767

    @jamesstone3767

    6 жыл бұрын

    DaveyDacusGuitars thanks! I appreciate the tips!!

  • @asmrindustries5431
    @asmrindustries54316 жыл бұрын

    Not a massive fan of the shape but that’s just me , otherwise In every aspect it’s great

  • @bpabustan
    @bpabustan5 жыл бұрын

    Are you related to Donnie Dacus?

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Not to my knowledge. I know the last name isn't common, but I have heard of about 3 different groups in a couple different states that I know of. I don't recall a Donnie.

  • @bpabustan

    @bpabustan

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@daveydacusguitars9033 The Donnie Dacus I was referring to was a former lead guitarist of Chicago, he replaced Terry Kath.....I was just trying my chances hehehehehehe.....

  • @muthumuhesh782
    @muthumuhesh7824 жыл бұрын

    Hii

  • @HarlanHarvey76
    @HarlanHarvey765 жыл бұрын

    Nice shop....😔

  • @daveydacusguitars9033

    @daveydacusguitars9033

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, it's taken a lot of time and energy to get it there. Some money too, but honestly feels like more time and energy. Don't be discouraged though!! My first shop had a dirt floor and a very leaky roof. The rust is still on my drill press and a few other tools from it. So I know exactly where you are coming from. Came a long way since then. Somehow the camera makes it look WAY bigger than it actually is as well. It's about 8' ×18' and needs a lot more storage which I'm currently wolrimg on. But it's good and stable and dry, I definitely enjoy my time in it.

  • @naldo3237
    @naldo32375 жыл бұрын

    and the play..???

  • @everythingbobbywolfe
    @everythingbobbywolfe6 жыл бұрын

    To the folks that disliked the video, you have no soul... You need Jesus Awesome build!

  • @dabortiz2437

    @dabortiz2437

    6 жыл бұрын

    Bobby Wolfe Is Jesus a mexican carpenter homie Bobby ? See kids u learn a lot in this videos, homie Bobby can u give us jesus phone number to get the pine with those lines that looks so trippy when u r hi

  • @evilcowboy

    @evilcowboy

    5 жыл бұрын

    Clever........Its about as clever as using the word "hi" for "high". This is not nitpicking as you left two letters completely out. I would have let it go but your sentence made no sense and you capitalized "Jesus" at first and then just forgot proper nouns being capitalized mid-sentence and then capitalized "Bobby" right next to the name "Jesus". It was like reading a sentence written by someone who had an aneurysm right in the middle of typing. But then again couldn't expect much from someone who forgot to capitalize their own last name as it is written in your screen name. What was it failure to attend or failure to understand or both, cause I grasped that shit on accident sleeping halfway through English..........Oh I forgot only your first name is American so I guess your a half in half out kind of guy and I mean that literally. Do these phrases and letters scare you? INS or green card. Who named you "Dave Ortiz" that is a generic American first name and a generic Mexican last name. Guess it could have been worse and been "Jose' Ortiz" but I figure you probably have like 13 cousins 8 brothers and 2 sisters all named "Jose' ", so "Dave" sounds less brown.