Great progress Mr. Bill!. Might I suggest to new builders to either use only one screw at first before they confirm string alignment with strings to make sure string spacing is parallel to the neck first. Also I keep some kite string from one of those dollar store kites a local kid broke to use for testing string alignment. That way you are not exposing expensive real strings to the air while the longer body sanding and shaping as well as finishing happens. Them are gettin pretty expensive these days.
Great progress Mr. Bill!. Might I suggest to new builders to either use only one screw at first before they confirm string alignment with strings to make sure string spacing is parallel to the neck first. Also I keep some kite string from one of those dollar store kites a local kid broke to use for testing string alignment. That way you are not exposing expensive real strings to the air while the longer body sanding and shaping as well as finishing happens. Them are gettin pretty expensive these days.
Yes, taking it slow when mounting those critical items makes a lot of sense.
Please ask them if they are going to make any more Razorbacks with the flamed maple veneer.
I'll ask that for sure.
*promosm*
I don't see a truss rod in the neck, confirm?
There is a truss rod.
@@billsguitargarage That woulda been a show stopper, so cool. Great build btw, loved the series!
@@AlloyMusicForge BTW. Weight is 5.1 lbs. So super lite.