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Some Damage To My Ute.
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BanjoJ |
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Joined: September 2012 Posts: 811 Location: Thredbo, NSW, Australia | BFLG to the rescue! I hope. I was at a gig last night, my ute was on a double Hercules stand when someone pulled a lead and the whole thing fell over. My ute fell face down on the floor! I said Oh My! or words to that effect. A small section of binding on the fretboard came off, which I found and glued back today. However, there was a rattle that concerned me. I opened the inspection hatch and felt the braces and two braces have come partially loose for about 100 to 150mm at one end. Roughly the sections within the red circle. It should be fairly easy to glue them back, but before I do I thought it best to check what glue would be best to use. Edited by BanjoJ 2016-02-04 11:41 PM (Braces-04.JPG) Attachments ---------------- Braces-04.JPG (80KB - 0 downloads) | ||
seesquare |
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Joined: November 2002 Posts: 3611 Location: Pacific Northwest Inland Empire | Dan? I'm thinkin', anything that will wick under the braces, will probably do the job. Just clamp the braces, with a couple of strong magnets- one on the top, one inside. May need to make a metal caul, if that's your method. Well, my $0.02, anyway....... | ||
Mark in Boise |
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Joined: March 2005 Posts: 12755 Location: Boise, Idaho | I think FlySig had a similar problem with a Ute and had it redone at the Mothership. | ||
DanSavage |
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Joined: June 2012 Posts: 2316 Location: Pueblo West, CO | I'd use thin CA. I'm a Zap fan. (Pacer Technologies - same guys who make ZPoxy) It will wick completely under the brace. Then, use some Zip Kicker (accelerant) to cure the glue. Basically, just lay the guitar face-down on something like a bath towel that will support the top to keep it from deflecting. Press down on the brace to keep it in contact with the top. Because of the small size of the hole, you might have to fashion a clamp to go between the back of the top and the bowl to keep the brace pressed against the top. Then, run some thin CA along the edge of the brace. Not too much. Once the glue is wicked, spray some Zip Kicker to cure the glue. Leave the clamp in place for 5 minutes or so. The brace should be good to go. The main thing to remember is you don't want to use too much glue. Just enough to wet the glue joint, but not so much that it runs all over the inside of the guitar. | ||
BanjoJ |
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Joined: September 2012 Posts: 811 Location: Thredbo, NSW, Australia | Thanks very much for the advice guys. Returning it to the mothership from Australia isn't practicle, so I'll do the repair myself. I'll chase up some thin CA and kicker, thanks Dan. Here's a clamp I made for a repair on my 1614 Folklore. It should do the trick. (Turnbuckle-02.JPG) Attachments ---------------- Turnbuckle-02.JPG (37KB - 0 downloads) | ||
arumako |
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Joined: October 2012 Posts: 1034 Location: Yokohama, Japan | BanjoJ - 2016-02-04 1:37 PM I was at a gig last night, my ute was on a double Hercules stand when someone pulled a lead and the whole thing fell over. My ute fell face down on the floor! I said Oh My! or words to that effect. Ouch! My heart goes out to you BanjoJ! +1 on the ZAP stuff. Dan introduced me to the adhesive when I was fixing the bridge on my 1117-4. The CA stuff is excellent and if you ever need good strong epoxy, I've used the 30-Minute ZPoxy with great results (of course, you won't need that for this brace repair). I like your homemade bridge clamp too very cool! If the CA glue gets between the rubber clamp cover and the bowl and/or brace, it is going to adhere, so you might want to cover the clamp cover with some saran wrap. It just makes things easy to clean off, if glue gets on/into unintended areas. Good luck! | ||
BanjoJ |
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Joined: September 2012 Posts: 811 Location: Thredbo, NSW, Australia | Thanks Ken. I've done one brace and will do the second tomorrow. So far so good. This is pretty small compared to what you and Dan do, but equally important to get a fantastic guitar back in playable condition. It could have been much worse, so I'm grateful the damage was minor. | ||
arumako |
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Joined: October 2012 Posts: 1034 Location: Yokohama, Japan | Those Ute's are few and far between! Good thing the damage was minimal and reversible with some simple CA glue! Hope it all works out for ya! | ||
TAFKAR |
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Joined: April 2008 Posts: 2985 Location: Sydney, Australia | Ouch Paul! Hope it's all back and humming fine. | ||
BanjoJ |
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Joined: September 2012 Posts: 811 Location: Thredbo, NSW, Australia | It is Richard. I glued the second loose brace yesterday, and checked it this morning and the rattles have gone and it sounds great. Very happy. | ||
Eynowd |
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Joined: July 2014 Posts: 154 Location: Canberra, Australia | Pounds to peanuts that the words "Oh My!" were not what came out of your mouth. Is the offender out of hospital yet? Glad to hear the guitar turned out OK. I know how much that one means to you. | ||
BanjoJ |
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Joined: September 2012 Posts: 811 Location: Thredbo, NSW, Australia | All back to normal and playing like a dream. Thanks people for the advice and support. BFLG to the rescue - yet again. You gotta love the OFC. | ||
arumako |
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Joined: October 2012 Posts: 1034 Location: Yokohama, Japan | Congratulations BanjoJ! So glad that everything worked out well. I have a feeling a bigger project is not too far down the line for ya! | ||
BanjoJ |
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Joined: September 2012 Posts: 811 Location: Thredbo, NSW, Australia | Thanks Ken. I look constantly for a project Ovation to try something more ambitious. So far no luck, but I'll keep looking. | ||
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