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The Story of Fire…

I recently got a new guitar, and it’s awesome. Most people that have seen it have asked me “Dude, what is that?”. While I have repeated it’s story a few times, here it is with details and pictures.

One more thing. I am also a bit of a dork, in that I name all of my guitars. Some are obvious (Kramer & Jackson), some are not so obvious (George & Junx). This one is called “Fire”.

Anyway…

It all started few months ago when I was talking with a friend about costs/possibility of building a custom guitar. Based on that discussion, I started searching for parts and doing some rough calculations on costs. That got me thinking…

The Challenge

Can I build a custom guitar end-to-end of decent quality, for around $500?

The Lesson

For those of you with ADD or that don’t feel like reading anymore, here are the bullet points of the lesson:

  1. Parts from different vendors will have different specs/tolerances, and therefore may not fit perfectly.
  2. It will cost a little more than you expect.
  3. See number 1.
The Process

I got more serious about my research. I created a spreadsheet, and created a list of every part I would need, it’s price and it’s direct link. All of the parts would come from vendors online, other than the few that I already had in my “misc. guitar parts box”. (which turned out to be not very many)

At this point, I needed to finalize the design I was going for: Basically a Charvel San Dimas clone with top mounted floyd, and a HB/S pickup config. Simple, sexy and built to ROCK.

The Sources

All of the parts were sourced from one of four different places;

The Talent

At this point I need to point out that part of the original “plan” was for me to get all of the parts, assemble the guitar, and simply take in to an expert for a final setup.

By far, the smartest thing I did was involve Darren Ross of http://www.rossguitars.com/ before I even ordered the first part. He was instrumental (see what I did there?)in advising me on some the parts to order. I also quickly realized that he probably could assemble it much faster, and with higher quality than I ever could. Meaning that he wouldn’t have to fix any of my stupid mistakes made during assembly, when he was doing the set up. 

He did an amazing job! Most of the pictures are also thanks of him.

The Parts

Here they all are. Ready to be taken over to Darren’s place to begin assembly.

  • Body – Pauwlonia with a flame maple cap. Very similar to Alder.
  • Neck – 22 fret maple with “skunk stripe”
  • Bridge – Black licensed Floyd Rose
  • Pickups – Ibanez IBZ/USA. They are Dimarzio OEM. Bridge is close to a “Breed”, neck is close to a “HS-1”.
The Assembly

Like I hint to above, we encountered a few “bumps” during assembly. Honestly, I probably wouldn’t have found these, and if I had, I wouldn’t have been able to solve them as elegantly or quickly as Darren did.

Problem One (Mounting the Bridge)

The routing for the bridge wasn’t in the correct position, and routing for the pickups was too far back. If this wasn’t addressed, the guitar would never intonate correctly, and the strings would never line up correctly on the neck.

The solution was to route the bridge slot, and glue a small piece of maple into the pickup cavity. Then drill the holes for the posts so they are in the correct position.

Problem Two (Bridge sustain block)

The bridge (Black Floyd Rose copy) shipped with a sustain block that was too short. Since we were “flush mounting” the bridge as opposed to “recess mounting” like you see in just about every other guitar with a floyd these days (including my Kramer and Jackson), the block needed to be longer.

This is where my “misc. guitar parts box” came in handy. I had a longer brass block from the Gotoh that I installed in my Kramer. Of course, the holes were smaller in the block, so Darren had to drill them out to fit the new bridges screws. Thank goodness it worked!

Problem Three (Bad fret)

The 22 fret neck I got off eBay must have been made on a Monday or a Friday. Because the 14th fret was whack. Like the fret wire was a different, smaller gage. Therefore, Darren had to replace the 14th fret. Otherwise the neck buzzed like crazy. Here are some shots of before, during and after the fret replacement.

 

Installing the Locking Nut

This wasn’t a problem, in that we knew that we were going to have to route the nut in order to install locking nut. Darren built a quick jig to hold the neck so he could run the router.

   

Finished Product

Here it is, all done and ready to rock. And ROCK it does! I recently played it a gig, and it sounded and played great!

On the left is sitting on Darren’s bench, with the plastic still on the pickgaurd. You see the nice flame maple cap on the body.

On the right is it with the rest of the gang in the background.

 

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Jet City’s New Blog

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Quick Update on the Band Situation

We have changed our name to "Dorian Blu". You can check out our myspace page here: http://www.myspace.com/dorianblu
 
We already have some song samples and gigs posted.
 
Since the first of the year, I have also been playing with the Worship band at my church: http://www.whatismosaic.com/
 
 
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A look back at 2009…

Like most people, the past year had it’s share of ups and downs. For me personally, this ranged from the pride and happiness of seeing my oldest son graduate High School and begin the next chapter into adulthood, and the sobering reality of unemployment. At the end of the day, we all survived. We still have our health and each other, and as I grow a year older, I am again reminded that is the most important thing.
 
Here is to 2010, and all of the experiences it will provide.
 
Peace,
 
-Dan-
 
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Studio PC Part 4

I re-installed the nVIDIA video card. The built in video just doesn’t support good resolution rates. DVD playback works if I DON’T use Windows Media Player 11 9Or whatever the latest version I have installed is) That damn thing is a resrouce hog. I can use the Media Player "Classic" and it works fine.
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Studio PC Part 3

I think I fixed the video playback issue – I yanked the NVIDIA video card, and am now using the onboard video with the latest drivers. Sure, the resolution isn’t as good, and it does take up 8mb of (shared memory), but it looks like I have DVD video now. Yea!
 
Now if those tools at Micro X computers off eBay would just respond to my emails about the bad memory…
 
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