Kevin Gallagher wrote:
The sides aren't bent at all over the linings, but are rounded after assembly. The purflings
do cover the joint between the top and sides, but not because there is a sloppy joint or alot
of gaps. Daniel Brauchli is an incredible builder with skills that will boggle the minds of most
others.
Ron Thorn of Thorn Guitars developed a techinique for inlaying his tops into the body, but
he's building electrics and is a very talented CNC programmer/operator. There are absolutely no
distinguishable gaps between his tops and side edges. Taylor recently started doing the very
same thing almost ten years after Ron started it. The technique gives the appearance of binding
being present when the edges are, in fact, part of the body slab.
In the case of Brauchli's guitars, the sides are bent just like any of us builders bend our sides
and the top is very accurately cut to sit down in against the linings as they're set to a depth
away from the edge equal to the desired thickness of the top. It would be impossible to create a
bend over the linings at the radius that is present there.
With the radius cut on that exposed edge, we're getting the illusion of the side being much
thicker than it is.
Regards,
Kevin Gallagher/Omega Guitars
Fantastic.
I do like this technique, I've been trying to figure out the most efficient method all day.
The purfling channel I assume would be routed afterwards, and hide a multitude of possible 1/64th gap sins (better add a few of these
) between a trickily cut top and the sides......