Today I stumbled upon my first website I ever made on some free webhost back in '98, and surprisingly I found some old pictures from my first luthier-ish activity. More on that in a sec...
But first, my main question is: How do you repair old ladder-braced guitars where the top has bellied? Is there a way to flatten the top closer to the original shape? Or do you accept the belly and just reset the neck to get the action right again?
I bought this '65 Gibson LGO about ten or twelve years ago, before I really knew anything at all about guitar construction. It played great for a few years, but then the top started to belly and the bridge started pulling away.
So I decided I would try to remove the back and rebrace the top with an X-brace. This is what I found when I removed the back:
I think they poured the epoxy into the soundhole and shook it around, that stuff was everywhere on the inside of the top, and some on the back and sides.
I have hacked away a bit at the epoxy and got out the bridge screws from the plastic bridge), but otherwise it's been sitting in my closet for about five years.
Now I'm thinking it might be cooler to rebrace it with ladder bracing, if I can do that and make it structurally sound. I've also got an older parlor guitar with the same bellying issue, and I'm trying to figure out how I should proceed on it as well. Any thoughts on that are appreciated.