BobK wrote:
Very nice, and in my opinion, a great balance between hand and machine work. I like the texture on the rim, a feature of Vcarve that I've yet to play around with. What kind of jigging did you use to hold the neck for machining?
Bob
Thanks--that balance is what it's all about for me. I love hand building, but also love not hurting! Machines definitely have their place, but so does handwork.
I have a series of jigs that I use for holding the various parts--all of them are made from King Star Board and 1/4" round foam gasket material and use a vacuum pump. I rout a channel inside the perimeter of the piece I'm going to machine with a 1/4" round nose end mill and press the gasket material into the slot. I use index pins on everything. Works great, and it makes it easy to reposition work when I'm doing multiple passes on multiple pieces. I put a few short videos out on YouTube that show some details of this. Here are links to a couple:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmhEA2wQ8OEhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3vqllp_3AA&feature=mfu_in_order&list=ULThe first link shows some neck carving, the second shows a better look at how the jig works. The jig in that video is made to hold peghead overlays, necks and fingerboards (overlay on the left, neck in the middle and fingerboard on the right). I zero the machine once and then use the G54, 55 and 56 offset codes to position the machine for each of the locations on the jig.
VCarve is a pretty cool program. The back of the rim is made of a phenolic material--it works great for that part of the banjo from a tone perspective, but has always thrown some challenges out there regarding finish. Putting the texture on it sort of took care of that issue while looking pretty neat at the same time....
Dave