Edenguitars wrote:
However, I think the problem is that somehow in the joining of the body, the headblock did not come out perpendicular to the sides.
Edenguitars wrote:
I can only assume that something happened and the top and back didn't join to the sides at right angles.
Thinking like this will only cause you to worry and may just get you in trouble.
This is one reason why I never put anything but a right angle between the top face of the neck/head block and the sides of the block. I clamp the neck block down to my flat granite slab than glue the sides to the block all in the mold. This way I'm sure I have the block glued in correctly. But having said this, I still machine my angle into the neck block and rims after the rims are fully assembled with lining installed.
If you have any radius on the top and back, they should NEVER come out perpendicular or at a right angle to the sides. There should be an angle greater than 90* on both the top and the back when looking at the sides. If the top where flat (thus creating a right angle between the top and side) where the fretboard is glued down you'd have to add a shim under the fretboard inorder to set the neck angle properly. It's easier to build that angle into the construction of the rims and thus the top when it is glued on versus making a shim for under the neck.
MichaelP wrote:
Let me ask a couple questions. How tall is your bridge? What scale is the fretboard? What body is the guitar (Dread, SJ, OM,?) what top radius are you using and from the butt of the body how far is it to the apex of the dome? I can lay this out in cad real quick and see pretty much what induced the the extra degree needed. This might help you on a future build.
This is also a good reason for the Woolson/Fox neck jig. If one has the ability to lay everything out in cad (which I do like Michael) it's much easier to see how the design of the neck set works with the height of the bridge etc... But if not, than the Woolson/Fox neck jig is really an asset in getting the neck 95% there with only a bit of fine tunning to go.
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