What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
Moderator: The Captain
- daCod
- Posts: 9907
- Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2010 3:01 pm
- Location: BunzTown NE
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
waiting on a rotary switch then it's off to the races with this one.
wire in switch. set it up right proper like. finish the headstock. then make some noise
wire in switch. set it up right proper like. finish the headstock. then make some noise
if you're ever in the shit, grab my tit
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
- Dr Tony Balls
- Posts: 2336
- Joined: Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:42 pm
- Location: Brooklyn
- andy-h-h
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed Apr 08, 2020 10:52 pm
- Location: Australia
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
Finally getting to the end of my MKIV - and after testing more transistor combinations than I can remember, I can see why people end up with more than one. It's nearly impossible to settle on just one, when there's so many flavours available. Q1 & 2 are sorted (OC45s). Q3 has an OC75, and OC45, and a CV7004 on the shortlist. AC128 and a Toshiba 2SB415 we also contenders - I like the Toshiba, but it was a little noisey. OC76 were also very cool, but had more of a tighter distortion vibe to the fuzz.... maybe I'll need three?
UPDATE: Well I had what I think is a minor brainwave, albeit a slightly borrowed one. Why not put Q3 on a rotary switch and have multiple flavours on one pedal?
With rotary
Without rotary
UPDATE: Well I had what I think is a minor brainwave, albeit a slightly borrowed one. Why not put Q3 on a rotary switch and have multiple flavours on one pedal?
With rotary
Without rotary
- Jim Goad
- Posts: 3457
- Joined: Thu Aug 28, 2008 4:23 pm
- Location: Oxfordshire UK
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
Looking good. I love the modified headstock!
It's like an orange on a toothpick
- Jim Goad
- Posts: 3457
- Joined: Thu Aug 28, 2008 4:23 pm
- Location: Oxfordshire UK
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
Since I’m keeping the Hohner JT60 I’ve decided to upgrade the bridge with a steel saddle, steel block Wilkinson. Needed slight modification to sit on the studs but I can dive-bomb the shit out of this and it comes right back in tune. Got a full tone of up pull too.
It's like an orange on a toothpick
- daCod
- Posts: 9907
- Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2010 3:01 pm
- Location: BunzTown NE
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
[pots date to] 1963 Supro Dual Tone. i absolutely love these old fiberglass things. plays nearly identical to my old JB Hutto model (or the jack white guitar depending on where your head is at) with the exception of the bridge tone control. this is wired standard treble roll off like any other guitar. the Hutto was a bass cut similar to that of a Jaguar's Strangle switch. had originally planned on rewiring this to have the same option but the insides are so fekkin pristine i cant bring myself to messing with it.
however.
these bridges, in my honest opinion, SUCK for heavy handed players like myself. rosewood base with rocking bridge on two posts. i had swapped the Hutto for a 60's bigsby style compensated bridge that had 2 metal bases it sat on. they had a little felt pad that kind of held them in place somewhat. this one does not. does anyone have a solution to keep the bridge base in place w/o drilling or seriously modifying the top of the guitar? i thought about making two small nail points to press into the base. maybe 1/8" total length so they'd just barely press into the body and the bridge base. good n sticky double sided tape maybe?
here's gut-shots of the guitar. had a time-capsule smell when i cracked it open
however.
these bridges, in my honest opinion, SUCK for heavy handed players like myself. rosewood base with rocking bridge on two posts. i had swapped the Hutto for a 60's bigsby style compensated bridge that had 2 metal bases it sat on. they had a little felt pad that kind of held them in place somewhat. this one does not. does anyone have a solution to keep the bridge base in place w/o drilling or seriously modifying the top of the guitar? i thought about making two small nail points to press into the base. maybe 1/8" total length so they'd just barely press into the body and the bridge base. good n sticky double sided tape maybe?
here's gut-shots of the guitar. had a time-capsule smell when i cracked it open
if you're ever in the shit, grab my tit
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
- Jim Goad
- Posts: 3457
- Joined: Thu Aug 28, 2008 4:23 pm
- Location: Oxfordshire UK
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
I’d try double sided tape or a couple of thin bits of rubber before anything else. Don’t want to do any permanent mods if possible.
It's like an orange on a toothpick
- daCod
- Posts: 9907
- Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2010 3:01 pm
- Location: BunzTown NE
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
Yessir. Same page there
After playing this yesterday at practice I definitely think it’s going to need something done. It’s getting a proper setup with heavier gauge strings for sure. And I’ll be ordering a lightweight aluminum bigsby rocker bridge setup for it. Metal base instead of rosewood. And I’ll smooth off the ‘rocker’ bottom profile of the bridge to make it sit flat. Did this trick with the Airline. Then will try the double sided Gorilla tape route and see where that gets us.
if you're ever in the shit, grab my tit
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
- simonm
- Posts: 985
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2008 12:01 am
- Location: East London, UK
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
I have several Valco gtrs (no resoglass models though) and I have replaced nearly all bridges with old Bigsby bridges, but using the original bases or posts. Valco did make a metal version of the lightning bolt rosewood bridge, I have one but I don’t which models it was used on or when, haven’t seen any others...
Handmade, high-impact, great-looking radical queer germanium fuzz. A different approach to 1960s-inspired fuzz pedals, no clones, check them out at https://goodfuzzysounds.com or on YouTube https://tinyurl.com/GFS-YT
- daCod
- Posts: 9907
- Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2010 3:01 pm
- Location: BunzTown NE
Re: What is on your workbench Tinkerers?
Do you try and make sure they’re the ones made for a plain G instead of wound G or does it really matter all that much? Not sure which I had on the last guitar. Didn’t know it was a thing until looking at them again for this project.simonm wrote: ↑Sun Aug 09, 2020 7:09 pm I have several Valco gtrs (no resoglass models though) and I have replaced nearly all bridges with old Bigsby bridges, but using the original bases or posts. Valco did make a metal version of the lightning bolt rosewood bridge, I have one but I don’t which models it was used on or when, haven’t seen any others...
has an aftermarket bridge on it already. but i'd prefer the bigsby style.
if you're ever in the shit, grab my tit
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
i like pedals when you know they're on
When I saw you with that lost look on your face saying you had just saw ET, I thought "uh oh, game over" - innerflight
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests