Renamed: Tele kit build
Comments
Look on Ebay for second hand Fender Mexican Tele pickups - they go very cheaply, in fact you can barely give them away… not because they’re no good, but because a lot of people take them out to replace with something more expensive and there’s no demand for them otherwise. Even the cheaper type with ceramic magnets on the bottom are actually OK, although the reissue type with alnico rod magnets are better. I’d be amazed if you have to pay more than £40 for a pair.JRgtar said:
I’ve seen a wired loom and pickups for £180 from Alegree, but any other budget recommendations for doing that? I play blues, but really just after a classic tele sound at low cost.
The switch, pots and jack make no difference to the tone really - pots maybe a tiny bit, but only slight, and possibly debatable.
No. It makes a difference to the feel when bending notes, but not noticeably to the sound.JRgtar said:
Also, is it worth me trying to convert from a top loader to a through-body style? Will I hear a great difference?
Drilling the body for through stringing is much trickier than it looks, even with a proper drill press - the drill bit will wander slightly in the wood, and the ferrules may conflict with each other on the back. (Or at best just look obviously out of position.)
Vintage or modern type?JRgtar said:
Finally, good value tuner recommendations?!
Either way the answer is probably Wilkinson. Gotoh are good too, but a bit more expensive.
JRgtar said:
I appreciate this might be at the lower end of skill levels for this board, but hoping you can advise nevertheless.
The only dumb question is an unasked question.BillDL said:JRgtar said:I appreciate this might be at the lower end of skill levels for this board, but hoping you can advise nevertheless.Please don't ever put yourself down like that. Some people know loads about the technical side of guitar specifications and about building and modding them but the vast majority of players have never set up their own guitar let alone changed electrical parts. Everybody that is quite knowledgeable about this kind of thing had to learn from scratch and they aren't going to turn up their nose or scoff at the apparent simplicity (to them) of questions like yours.
Despite appearances to the contrary, I do not answer questions to show off. I do it because thinking about guitar problems helps to exercise my few remaining brain cells.
One of the disadvantages of experienced based advice is that it is possible to have seen too many variants of the same guitar design. For example, the pickup selector options on a PRS Custom have changed several times during the history of the model. It is necessary to ask with which era the control circuit complies.
A customer of mine who is in a "household name" band plays Mexican Telecasters with both types of pickup. He does okay.ICBM said:Look on Ebay for second hand Fender Mexican Tele pickups - they go very cheaply, in fact you can barely give them away… not because they’re no good, but because a lot of people take them out to replace with something more expensive and there’s no demand for them otherwise. Even the cheaper type with ceramic magnets on the bottom are actually OK, although the reissue type with alnico rod magnets are better. I’d be amazed if you have to pay more than £40 for a pair.JRgtar said:
I’ve seen a wired loom and pickups for £180 from Alegree, but any other budget recommendations for doing that? I play blues, but really just after a classic tele sound at low cost.
- It’s a Harley Benton tele kit.
- I’ve no soldering experience, but am keen to learn.
- @ICBM thanks for the top loader conversion opinion, really useful (I was thinking it looked easy, but you’ve set me straight).
- @BillDL useful pick-up thoughts, thanks. I guess I have a tele sound in mind, but you’re right: strings and general set-up not helping here.
I’ll feedback more on this project, and undoubtedly have more questions, many thanks!
If the kit guitar has a larger than traditionally-sized neck pickup cavity, you could elect to install a more powerful unit. Strat, P90, Firebird and others are all worth considering. The downside is that your pickguard would need modifying to accept such a pickup.
Body: Rengas (routed for single coil Tele pickups only)
Neck: C profile, Maple with unshaped paddle headstock, 2-way (double action) truss rod.
Fretboard: Amaranth, 22 frets, 305mm (12") radius, 648mm (25.5") scale, 42mm nut.
Hi,
I’ve renamed this thread to encompass the entirety of my tele kit build. On the electronics front, I’m really grateful to the kindness of @BillDL he went above and beyond. Despite being a basic kit, this build has some sentimental value to me given I started it with my Dad, who - sadly - died recently: a keen woodworker, he’d have enjoyed the next part of the build.
I’m working on the body finishing next and would welcome any opinions on my proposed process before I get started. My aim is for a transparent, glossy wood finish, but with some tinting to the wood (to give a richer colour). I’m aware the body isn’t necessarily beautiful grain, but am ok with this. It’d a Harley Benton telecaster kit (rengas timber).
First
Sand guitar body from 80 grit. Purpose is to remove primer that was on body. Add filler to any dings on guitar body.
Q: Some websites mention using dampness and soldering irons to extract dings. Is there any disadvantage to just using filler?
Second
At 320 grit, use Use grain filler on all body areas.
Q: What colour filler? Aesthetic/interesting grain is minimal. Is it necessary on the wood I have? I.e. I can’t tell if it's open or closed pore wood.
Third
At 600 grit, wpe body with a damp cloth and allow to dry. Re-sand with 600 grit. Apply first coat of Osmo Polyx (https://www.wood-finishes-direct.com/product/osmo-colour-foundation) I’m using a tinted finish to avoid an extra phase of staining the wood, in addition to the final finish. Wipe off any excess and then allow to dry (8-10hrs). Lightly sand with 800 grit. Brush and wipe off any dust. Apply second coat of Osmo Polyx. Allow to dry.
Q: How do I get a glossy finish - apply a wax on top? The Osmo Polyx tinted is only available in satin.
Thoughts on above very welcome! It’s a process partly lifted from a recent magazine. Finding wood finishing videos very addictive.
Thank you
I did notice some tins in Wickes last time I was there
Sorry for your loss my friend.JRgtar said:Despite being a basic kit, this build has some sentimental value to me given I started it with my Dad, who - sadly - died recently: a keen woodworker, he’d have enjoyed the next part of the build.
Hope it’s ok to post a link from another forum, but I found a very useful thread here: https://guitarmaking.co.uk/community/finishing/osmo-finish-tips/
So, I think I’ll go down the Osmo satin tinted route and then wax the result: this is the process followed by both the magazine I read and the link. Grain filler doesn’t appear to be needed with a poly finish. I’m ordering a few samples first to test out colour options.
Further thoughts always welcome, but I’ll post some photos as I progress (probably slowly owing to work, family etc!).
The body finishing is going well, applying coats of Osmo Polyx and pretty pleased with results.
I’m now turning my attention to the neck. Unfortunately, there’s a couple of small scratches (see: https://flic.kr/p/2qrzbwx). Any advice on how to fill these appreciated. I’ve read that nail varnish can work, but then I’ll need to sand and level it - which would tten probably mean refinishing the neck. I’m undecided if I want to do this (neck feels great, but looks a bit pale). Any cleaner solutions I should consider?
As regards colour, you don’t know what the wood has previously been treated with, nor whether it would take stain evenly. So don’t try tinting the neck wood directly. Instead you could try tinting some Osmo with a few drops of spirit based stain, then test it on a spare piece of wood.
My method is wetsanding with Danish or tru-oil. Definitely not using wire wool for this stage and I find Osmo a bit thick for this method.Roland said:A different approach is to use @WezV’s “slurry” method of applying Osmo. This uses very fine OOOO grade wire wool. It leaves behind iron particles which emphasise the wood grain.
I do use 0000 Liberon wire wool for final wax stages after oil.
This would be my method for harder woods such as the maple neck for a soft sheen that feels good. I wouldn't do it on anything too soft or porous until a thicker level of oil has already been built up, but I don't normally aim for too glossy with oil finishes. It can be done, just not my thing
SameBillDL said:[EDIT - Whoops, sorry guys. I hadn't seen that there was a 2nd page and though I was posting after the last author comment on Page 1]
nero1701 said:If you want to send me your control plate with the Pot's, the and jack socket, I'd be happy to put it together and solder it up and put some quick connectors on for you. would take half an hour, I've some 0,022uf caps, so dint worry about one of those.
I’ll give the damp cloth and iron method a go on the neck, thanks, it did work well on the body. I am now convinced that sanding down and then oiling the neck is the way to go. I’ll report back!
@BillDL Nice one mateBillDL said:nero1701 said:If you want to send me your control plate with the Pot's, the and jack socket, I'd be happy to put it together and solder it up and put some quick connectors on for you. would take half an hour, I've some 0,022uf caps, so dint worry about one of those.Already done. Great minds think alike :)JRgtar now has a pair of Alegree Old Timer "Hybrid 5 & 2" pickups with quick connectors soldered to the wires, and has a nice thick control plate with quick connector leads soldered to a better quality switch, good quality 250K pots, 0.047uF orange drop capacitor, treble bypass filter, and an electrosocket jack mounting plate.
I appreciate this might be at the lower end of skill levels for this board, but hoping you can advise nevertheless.
I’m putting together a basic tele kit and - on first build - the pickups sound pretty feeble. Whilst I work on the body finishing, which my Dad is advising on despite being in poor health, I’m looking at whether it’s worth upgrading the electrics and pickups: this may be a guitar I retain for sentimental reasons so would like it to sound ok. I’ve seen a wired loom and pickups for £180 from Alegree, but any other budget recommendations for doing that? I play blues, but really just after a classic tele sound at low cost.
Also, is it worth me trying to convert from a top loader to a through-body style? Will I hear a great difference?
Finally, good value tuner recommendations?!
Advice on above welcome! Thanks