At Gaspro ask for torch tip file sets...under
five dollars and you'll get a set of round files that will
match uke string diameters for your nut slotting. This will
save you large dollars from purchasing individual nut slotting
files.
Cut up your old band saw blades or hacksaw blades into 2
and 3-inch sections. Cut up some scrap hardwood ½
thick by 1' high by 2 or 3 inches long. Kerf one edge of
the hardwood section about three sixteenths deep and insert
the toothed edge of the bandsaw blade into kerf and secure
with 5-minute epoxy.
Flatten opposite blade edge with flat mill
file...burnish edge to create a hook and you will have a
sharp and handy scraper.
Super glue stored away on your shelf? Used
just a bit a couple of months ago and now the tube is rock
hard and ready for the trash? Keep your super glues in the
refrigerator to give it a longer shelf life.
Rule of thumb. For unwound strings slot
depth to same diameter of string. For wound strings usually
depth is ½ diameter deep as string is wide. However,
if you are an aggressive strummer and play like Sid Vicious.
deepen slots a bit.
Buzzing on open strings without depressing
frets is usually indicative of faulty nut slots. Too narrow
and string pinches. Too wide and string wanders, rattles
and buzzes. One other culprit maybe a saddle that has no
crown and is flat. String doesn't know where to be...add
crown.
Filed slots should be in the same direction
of your tuner placements and following the same angle as
the ramp of your headstock...which means the top of your
nut is angled toward tuning gears in the same angle as the
headstock scarf joint.
Tools from your local office supply. Take
a trip down to your Local Office Supply Store and purchase
these items: Fat Rubber Bands: great for holding together
sets and keeping loose items together. Metal binder clips…both
small and medium sizes. Use the clips to hang up soundboards,
gives them good air circulation. Clips are good to hang
any tool or jig that doesn't have a hanging hole already.
Also doubles as a mini clam for tentalones bindings and
purflings. Flat erasers…a must for sanding. And don't
forget the magic markers…always a need for a strong
visible line. Canned aerosol… compressed air in a
spray can. Always at the ready for quick clearing of the
ever-present dust and sawdust buildups…sans the noise
and racket of an air compressor. A bulb syringe also works
well.
For you fish lovers another must device
is a simple air pump that can be used while inlay routing
to provide a constant stream of air to get rid of dust and
enable one to actually wear a dust mask that covers ones
mouth. No need to blow now…let that air pump do the
work. For most users of the fabled Dremmel an air pump affixed
to the Dremmel and a clear plexi base is a must for fine,
quick and accurate routing of inlays.
I'm constantly employing different methods
to thickness saddle/nut blanks…(usually by router
or sander to hog off large amounts) .Then final smoothing
and polishing by hand. Here's another method that I recently
tried, to hog away excess nut or saddle materials. I chucked
a Dremmel # 115 high-speed cutter in my drill press. It's
the high speed bit with the spiral cut flutes on the sides
and bottom. I set my drill press stop just short of the
estimated finished thickness. Turned on the press and cranked
down on the flat blank as if I were drilling multiple holes...actually
using the bit like a rotary surface planer. Its safe and
you'll get a uniform thickness throughout. Final sanding
can be easily done by rubbing blank on sandpaper face up
on your bench. Aloha Nate dba GUITARSMITH.
Having trouble matching colors when you
are putting together your Ukes complete with back strips,
tail grafts, purflings and bindings and all that requisite
cool design mayhem? Here's a tip…take a stroll down
to your supermarket and stroll down the aisles with pencil
and paper pad. Check out the products for sale and note
their respective color schemes. Most products average 3
to 4 color combinations to flaunt their logos or product-packaging
theme. Now these colors are not randomly picked. Companies
pay the large bucks to designers who produce these color
variations…so take your time and look around and jot
down your favorite combinations…you will be surprised
how integrated your uke will be when attention is paid to
color schematics…and best of all, its free. Your uke
will be a bit tastier and without the chaos of a slew of
exotic woods and inlays converging on one another looking
like a 70's love mobile.
For finishing blunders and those accidental
scratches, here's some tips. Andy Berard of Okona Ukuleles
and Guitars…uses Micro Mesh finish papers for rubbing
out scratches…Howard Tanaka took Andy's advise and
Micro mesh and was able to rub out scratches from his lacquer
finish. Emil Bader uses Novus Products 1 and 2 to get at
scratches as well; and 3m Polishing papers are also truly
effective for light defects in the finish, followed by rubbing
compounds. *note