Barry wrote:Hi Trevor. Yes, nice work indeed.
It's always a big plus when these great old MIJ guitars are rescued from the wood chipper! That looks to be a beautiful slab of mahogany there and I'll bet she has a terrific tone.
Just curious...you seem to be well skilled, how come you didn't repair the original headstock? That one picture shows a nasty shatter, but could it not be spliced and repaired?
The original headstock has been broken 2 times and repaired 3 times. It fell once, and before I was into the whole guitar repair thing, I had it done by a guy whose idea of how to do it left it with a weak spot. So of course it broke again when it got bumped. So I clamped it back together with some strong wood glue. After that it felt like it was flexing and the guitar wouldn't stay in tune even with 9s tuned to Eb.
So my dad and I re-visited the original break point by dove-tail routing across the neck at the break and inserted a piece of mahogany across the grain. We sanded it smooth and re-shaped and all seemed well. However, the neck itself just never reacted right to truss rod adjustments and I could never get the guitar to hold tune, so after almost 15 years of messing around with it and never being truly happy, I found the new neck I'm using at AllParts and it's been great ever since.
I'll get the original neck back from my friend and post pictures of the repair work on the back. It's pretty scary.
I'm planning to make a template using the original headstock so that I can cut the original ElDegas head shape onto necks for others.