Great! I got that "Ah, yeah, of course!", moment when I saw what you'd done, but the penny would never have dropped without watching your video. Thank you.
This just reinforces that there are many ways to get a job done, and some are really low cost. This may be just the tip to give someone the courage to do a repair that seemed daunting and that they thought would require buying expensive tools. Thanks!!
Great! I got that "Ah, yeah, of course!", moment when I saw what you'd done, but the penny would never have dropped without watching your video. Thank you.
It can be tricky to get clamps through the sound hole sometimes, this method is very interesting, thanks for sharing
Brilliant 👏
Thank you Sir! I'll be attempting this on my old classical guitar 🙏
This just reinforces that there are many ways to get a job done, and some are really low cost. This may be just the tip to give someone the courage to do a repair that seemed daunting and that they thought would require buying expensive tools. Thanks!!
Thank you! Worked great and is very simple!
Great tip John. Thanks.
glad you can find it helpful
Genius!!!!! Thank you!!!
thank you Glen
How can I meet you John Tim and Glen?
Where is Jimmy Hall shop at ?
Did I understand correctly ? You actually drilled holes into the bridge ?
Not John, but all bridges have the 6 holes in them for the strings to pass through - those holes will need to be there eventually. Make sense?
@@LaSalle.ToneWorks has it correct