One of my high school english teachers in the early 90's had a 60's Gibson Dove that he would pull out on Friday afternoons and play tunes for us if we had behaved all week. He also let us have a Guitar club on Friday's at lunch and taught us some allman brothers, stormy monday and other pub classics. Every time I see one of these, I think of him. Thanks Mr. Garrett for inspiring a life-long love of guitar!
That's an inspirational teacher. Teachers like that inspired me into an education degree. Then, students inspired me into a career in data QA and research by their obnoxious behavior.
I have one of those Yamaha's! Mine had the neck broken off at some point and its been glued and screwd(!) back on so the action is lovely. I paid £125 for it. Its no Taylor but multitracking it with a pair of gypsy jazz guitars sounds really nice.
I don't know if anyone has ever commented on your playing, but I'm SO impressed with how you seem to be able to play in the style of the particular guitar and player on every guitar you work on! You never cease to amaze me!
Oh Ted, if you would only sing while you play--it would take dusky and dulcet to a hitherto never before attained level. Simply, I would wilt into cosmic nothingness….😂
I know you've mentioned before that you fear repetition in your content, but I'd watch you do the same job over and over. I find it soothing, and a nice way to mellow out at the end of the night. Keep up the great work. 👍
I have an original '68 DOVE which I ordered from GIBSON...one-owner guitar. Thanks for this inside information, I now know more about my guitar from this video !! My original nylon bridge saddles collapsed over time and were actually so low that the strings were touching the back of the bridge. After some thought, I replaced them with steel saddles which to me sound great, although brighter than the nylon. I have been using D'Addario 10/47 coated bronze strings which are great sounding and are easier on the fingers (as well as the soundboard). Also, I use a drop-in humbucker pickup from DIMARZZIO into an L.R. Baggs direct box/pre-amp and all that into a MARSHALL AD-50 amp. The slip-profile/narrow neck has really spoiled me since thumb-overs and low action make it extremely playable. I always learn something cool from your videos every time !!
Ted, I do enjoy your voice and the amount of humility in that voice. I really enjoy doing my own guitar work and this experience that you share makes it that much more enjoyable. Thanks as always for taking the time to document these repairs and upgrades. You subscribers should be in the millions imho.
Ted your videos could start a college for luthier students and your in depth knowledge of your craftsmanship skills are incredible Canadian people like yourself are the salt of the earth and your voice is a good tone for instructions and your work is excellent!Thank You Ted for your show.
I like to imagine its 1988 and I can hear Vicki Gabereau talking on the radio in the background as you pour life back into all these interesting instruments. 🙂
Thank you for the history lesson on the Dove, with all the notes on the aesthetic choices that went into its design. I greatly enjoy your subtle humour. I just fixed a friend's 1970 copy of the Dove, made in Japan by Pearl. It had a fractured neck around the 2nd to 3rd fret, a loose brace at the bottom, luckily an accessible one behind the soundhole, and some other minor issues. It has a laminated top, but it's fairly lightweight and has a loud, vivid and balanced sound that I think is not bad at all. I think the bottom resonates very well and contributes beautifully to the overall sound. Of course, I left the copy of the ABR-1 in place. And yes, the bling, trampling on all sides of all the thin lines out there, is fantastic. Maybe even more so because it's not Gibson-made bling but fake bling.
You deserve to be called a Doctor of Guitar, sir. Some institution of repute needs to give you an honorary doctorate. Your knowledge is just beyond the average repair specialist or people who only build. As much as I respect guitar builders, because of you I respect repairmen even more. Seriously. The amount of planning and forethought that has to occur before even proceeding, seems daunting. You make it seem easy of course. If you opened a school I'd come learn from you personally.
I believe we come to your channel to hear about love and respect for an abstract. Apple polishing doesn't move you but you are a welcome voice of sanity...speaking of which...polishing, polishing..polishing.
Having done almost 60 vintage FG neck resets and more than a few refrets, I've found LMII's FW74 wire (.080" wide x .043" high. .020" tang) is an exact match for Yamaha wire. It comes in a coil and the radius is close enough to just cut them off and hammer them in. I've also found the dip between the 6th & 10th frets, and many times the "14th fret hump" between the 12th & 16th frets. I wax the board and glue them in with thin CA (individually), first clamping them with a 14" radius block. Then I can cut them off almost immediately, level, crown with Stew Mac's Original Z-File, and files the fret ends.
I really enjoy your "problem solver" approach to many of the 'unique' issues you are expected to adress. As someone who had an industrial design education that turned into a musical lifestyle, I have been 'practicing' luthier skills on my own instruments since my first Harmony student atchtop. Sometimes there are no "typical" solutions and you need to think up one over in that lonely "place outside the box". You strike me as an extremely capable OTB craftsman. Your videos are always enjoyable and concise.
You give my spirit animal, Bob Ross a run for the money as far as having a very listenable, soothing voice. The big difference however is that after about 20 minutes with Bob I am out cold. The information, knowledge and techniques that you share are truly wonderful and insightful and keep me wanting more. It makes me want to start making acoustic guitars again! Thank you!!
I have 66 Guild that was refretted with very tall wire and it plays like a dream. Really brings the old neck to a place where it feels great up and down
I have a 1965 Dove. My adjustable bridge was replaced long ago with a rosewood insert and a bone saddle. Intonation is excellent. The nut width is 1.68”. Unlike the one you just worked on, my pickguard is glued, not screwed in place. Also, many of the older Doves have laminated sides and back. They were originally designed as strumming guitars for singers.
I recently obtained a FG 345. I have approximately $200 USD in it. An amazing guitar for a laminated instrument. I needed a setup on it, took it to J Gravity Strings in St. Louis. He cleaned the fretboard, dressed the frets, adjusted the truss rod and saddle.
Ted check out Graph Tech for the bridge saddles, they have replacements. I have a 1968 Dove and replaced my saddles with Graph tech saddles as well as a nut replacement and they sound amazing!
This will be interesting. I have a "yammer jammer" FG 340II. I still plays well within the range of my meager skills. I bought a Taylor a few years ago and sometimes I cheat on my Yamaha with it. I keep them in separate rooms and hope that they never discover each other.
Watching this as I finalize the ends of frets I just installed in a bound fretboard. Thanks Ted, this was the first time I used fish glue, a tang nipper (homemade), and a Chinese knockoff Jaws. All of which I learned from watching this channel. Previously I filled slots from the end with CA, cut the tangs with a Dremel and a cutoff wheel, and just pounding with a hammer. This Harmony I'm working on had an even worse fretboard, divots, missing chunks, and substantial amounts of finger grunge. Yummy!! 🤣🤣😋😋
I’ll chime in… thank you for your great videos 👍🏻 I love your attention to detail in every step no matter how complicated or „easy“ the task is and no matter how valuable your patient is. No guesswork and no dirty try and error. Fantastic craftsmanship knowledge and entertainment✌🏻
Gibson made some Hummingbirds with maple back and sides. They were the same as Dove bodies. They may have had surplus Dove bodies and just ran some Hummingbirds with those bodies.
Experience outweighs book learning every time. (Yet, the book learning brought us to the place of: This didn't work right last time, what if I....) Keep on educating us to save us from ourselves! Really appreciate your videos!
I had this exact guitar. Mine was made in 1981. Paid $180 for it. Once you warmed up on it and the top really started to move, it sounded pretty good. Wish I still had it.
I have been using the Jescar fret wire for years. They have just about any size wire you would want. I love their ENVO gold wire. Harder that regular wire but softer than stainless. Easy to work and withstands punishment much better than standard wire. Dearly enjoy your video's. Keep em coming.
I have almost the same Yamaha guitar, I think it's an FD 320. My father bought it way back and I kind of inherited it, when I started to play guitar. I really needs a neck reset, unfortunately, but for now, I will just continue to play it.
The Gibson Hummingbird's back and side are made of mahogany, whereas the back and side of the Gibson Dove are made of flame maple. The Gibson Dove's scale length is 25.5 inches, whereas the scale length on the Hummingbird is 24.75 inches.6 days ago
My favourite fret wire for acoustic guitars now is StewMac #155 which is .080” wide and .050” high. That’s 2.032mm X 1.27mm. Perfect for me for getting a good grip without pressing hard. Anything 1mm or under I find virtually unplayable on acoustic or electric.
Sir I've been playing guitar since I was 10. I'm getting to 66 , and to tell the truth; I've always hated luthiers because they would never show me how to do anything even though I asked many times. I can't believe you're showing it all off. Thanks
I like the sound of that Jescar 0.045" fret wire. I also deal with Next Gen and will be asking for it in future. Also, Graph Tech make white, Tusq inserts for Gibson ABR Bridges.
I have a 1972 Yamaha FG160 that I’ve owned since I was a kid. The frets need to be replaced as there is significant wear in the “cowboy chord” area, but I’m weighing the cost versus value. Also, it came with very low and thin frets which, when I was learning seemed normal to me, but now are strange feeling. It’s in remarkably good shape, but I don’t play it too often.
One of my high school english teachers in the early 90's had a 60's Gibson Dove that he would pull out on Friday afternoons and play tunes for us if we had behaved all week. He also let us have a Guitar club on Friday's at lunch and taught us some allman brothers, stormy monday and other pub classics. Every time I see one of these, I think of him. Thanks Mr. Garrett for inspiring a life-long love of guitar!
That's an inspirational teacher. Teachers like that inspired me into an education degree.
Then, students inspired me into a career in data QA and research by their obnoxious behavior.
Camr for the batitone voice, stay for the beautiful work, and tips.
Best luthier-related channel on YT. Thanks Ted.
Agreed! Ted has shown and taught me so much that I am now attempting some of the repairs for myself.
Really preaching to the choir on this one. I have one I bought new in 1978. All of the above and then some.....
Ta.
I fix all kinds of broken stuff. I am always impressed with your skills, thank you for being so precise in your method of repair.
I have one of those Yamaha's! Mine had the neck broken off at some point and its been glued and screwd(!) back on so the action is lovely. I paid £125 for it. Its no Taylor but multitracking it with a pair of gypsy jazz guitars sounds really nice.
I don't know if anyone has ever commented on your playing, but I'm SO impressed with how you seem to be able to play in the style of the particular guitar and player on every guitar you work on! You never cease to amaze me!
Oh Ted, if you would only sing while you play--it would take dusky and dulcet to a hitherto never before attained level.
Simply, I would wilt into cosmic nothingness….😂
Me too !
Anyone know if Ted recorded the musical intro he uses at the start of his videos?
I know you've mentioned before that you fear repetition in your content, but I'd watch you do the same job over and over. I find it soothing, and a nice way to mellow out at the end of the night. Keep up the great work. 👍
ONE EXCELLENT RUclips CHANNEL!
Always love a good Ted talk, congrats on almost reaching 100k subscribers! Well deserved man!
As I think about it, the REAL Ted talks...
100K reached today!
How had I not thought of that before :)
It is always delightful to hear the word chamfer. It is my favorite word that I have yet to use in my day-to-day conversations.
You are such an excellent teacher! As I watch more and more of your videos, my fret work steadily improves!
My favourite way to end the weekend 😊
Thank you
I have an original '68 DOVE which I ordered from GIBSON...one-owner guitar. Thanks for this inside information, I now know more about my guitar from this video !! My original nylon bridge saddles collapsed over time and were actually so low that the strings were touching the back of the bridge. After some thought, I replaced them with steel saddles which to me sound great, although brighter than the nylon. I have been using D'Addario 10/47 coated bronze strings which are great sounding and are easier on the fingers (as well as the soundboard). Also, I use a drop-in humbucker pickup from DIMARZZIO into an L.R. Baggs direct box/pre-amp and all that into a MARSHALL AD-50 amp. The slip-profile/narrow neck has really spoiled me since thumb-overs and low action make it extremely playable. I always learn something cool from your videos every time !!
When you've just had..ONE OF THOSE DAYS.
My day has turned around
Bipolar :) I'm still working on the Yamaha
Love your videos Ted ! I'm just on the other side of the border in Niagara County, NY.
Ted, I do enjoy your voice and the amount of humility in that voice. I really enjoy doing my own guitar work and this experience that you share makes it that much more enjoyable. Thanks as always for taking the time to document these repairs and upgrades. You subscribers should be in the millions imho.
Congrats on 100k subscribers that enjoys watching a master luthier work.
Ted your videos could start a college for luthier students and your in depth knowledge of your craftsmanship skills are incredible Canadian people like yourself are the salt of the earth and your voice is a good tone for instructions and your work is excellent!Thank You Ted for your show.
I like to imagine its 1988 and I can hear Vicki Gabereau talking on the radio in the background as you pour life back into all these interesting instruments. 🙂
Thank you for the history lesson on the Dove, with all the notes on the aesthetic choices that went into its design. I greatly enjoy your subtle humour. I just fixed a friend's 1970 copy of the Dove, made in Japan by Pearl. It had a fractured neck around the 2nd to 3rd fret, a loose brace at the bottom, luckily an accessible one behind the soundhole, and some other minor issues. It has a laminated top, but it's fairly lightweight and has a loud, vivid and balanced sound that I think is not bad at all. I think the bottom resonates very well and contributes beautifully to the overall sound. Of course, I left the copy of the ABR-1 in place. And yes, the bling, trampling on all sides of all the thin lines out there, is fantastic. Maybe even more so because it's not Gibson-made bling but fake bling.
That labored sigh is the mark of a true professional, Ted. You have achieved mastery.
You are a superb luthier and you have been entertaining me for a couple of years now.
Thank you...
Best gang ever….
Even as a musician I never thought I'd get so excited hearing a luthier get excited about fret wire.
You deserve to be called a Doctor of Guitar, sir. Some institution of repute needs to give you an honorary doctorate. Your knowledge is just beyond the average repair specialist or people who only build. As much as I respect guitar builders, because of you I respect repairmen even more. Seriously. The amount of planning and forethought that has to occur before even proceeding, seems daunting. You make it seem easy of course. If you opened a school I'd come learn from you personally.
Love the sound of those old Gibsons! Love your channel, and congrats on 100K subscribers, which it looks like you’ll hit in the next few days!
The Tune-O-Matic Acoustic Bridge is even cooler cause it increases the break angle making it super loud.
I believe we come to your channel to hear about love and respect for an abstract.
Apple polishing doesn't move you but you are a welcome voice of sanity...speaking of which...polishing, polishing..polishing.
Very close to 100k a big congratulations,😀 very well deserved.
Hey, congrats on reaching 100,000 subscribers!
100 000 subs hit, congrats man!
I just love how you change your playing based on the guitar
I just love this :) hope you never stop :)
100% "the misty moments before sleep"...yes, that is the vibe!
He knows his own power, he's dangerous.
Having done almost 60 vintage FG neck resets and more than a few refrets, I've found LMII's FW74 wire (.080" wide x .043" high. .020" tang) is an exact match for Yamaha wire. It comes in a coil and the radius is close enough to just cut them off and hammer them in. I've also found the dip between the 6th & 10th frets, and many times the "14th fret hump" between the 12th & 16th frets. I wax the board and glue them in with thin CA (individually), first clamping them with a 14" radius block. Then I can cut them off almost immediately, level, crown with Stew Mac's Original Z-File, and files the fret ends.
Dave you’re doing the lords work!
This is wonderful all around; I really appreciate the way you explain your reasoning and methods. As always, thanks!
Only a few more subs til you get your youtube plaque Ted. Good job! Thanks for another great vid! 👍
Hell, you're right. I normally don't subscribe to channels, but just did here.
I really enjoy your "problem solver" approach to many of the 'unique' issues you are expected to adress. As someone who had an industrial design education that turned into a musical lifestyle, I have been 'practicing' luthier skills on my own instruments since my first Harmony student atchtop. Sometimes there are no "typical" solutions and you need to think up one over in that lonely "place outside the box". You strike me as an extremely capable OTB craftsman. Your videos are always enjoyable and concise.
The accent you put on when sanding the bridge of the Dove took my by surprise. So full of Country. Love your videos!
Yet another Ted's classic which will hopefully withstand the pass of time to become legend first, and then myth
16:20 Nice work on that, Ted. Not sure I'd have picked up on that had it been me doing the work. Thanks for sharing! 🙏
Congrats on 100k, Ted!
Amazing job and amazing sound of the serviced guitar.
Love that interjection @25:23. Wow, the difference in sound between the Gibson and Yamaha was considerable.
Wow, that Dove sings!
Ted, congrats on the 100K subscribers!
I wish you were my neighbor! Great teaching!
The ABR Style Acoustic Bridge really sounds amazing.
That bit where you showed the slightly tight fret wire radius was a fantastic shot.
Ted, are you really saying people don't come for your dulcet dusky tones and looking for guitar tips? Well I never!🤣🤣🤣
A Thumbs Up, as I lay here next to my sleeping wife: I know she suspects something is going on…🤫
Ohhh thank you Teddy!
14:20 that’s exactly what I’m doing! 😂🤣
that time just flew by, as it does one when is having such fun. Thanks Ted.
Meticulous work as usual, watching your work is a real treat. Thanks for your effort.
Thanks for dropping a few more explanations into this video! I learn so much from this channel.
Great work and great playing! Thanks mr. Ted!
You give my spirit animal, Bob Ross a run for the money as far as having a very listenable, soothing voice. The big difference however is that after about 20 minutes with Bob I am out cold. The information, knowledge and techniques that you share are truly wonderful and insightful and keep me wanting more. It makes me want to start making acoustic guitars again! Thank you!!
I have 66 Guild that was refretted with very tall wire and it plays like a dream. Really brings the old neck to a place where it feels great up and down
I have a 1965 Dove. My adjustable bridge was replaced long ago with a rosewood insert and a bone saddle. Intonation is excellent. The nut width is 1.68”. Unlike the one you just worked on, my pickguard is glued, not screwed in place. Also, many of the older Doves have laminated sides and back. They were originally designed as strumming guitars for singers.
Man that dove still sings great watching you work
That Gibson sounds really nice.
I recently obtained a FG 345. I have approximately $200 USD in it. An amazing guitar for a laminated instrument. I needed a setup on it, took it to J Gravity Strings in St. Louis. He cleaned the fretboard, dressed the frets, adjusted the truss rod and saddle.
congrats on 100k subscribers!
Another great video, that gibson dove sounded really good ha. Gratz on 100k man!
Ted, that was some very intense thinking at several levels. Awsome work!
Ted check out Graph Tech for the bridge saddles, they have replacements. I have a 1968 Dove and replaced my saddles with Graph tech saddles as well as a nut replacement and they sound amazing!
This will be interesting. I have a "yammer jammer" FG 340II. I still plays well within the range of my meager skills. I bought a Taylor a few years ago and sometimes I cheat on my Yamaha with it. I keep them in separate rooms and hope that they never discover each other.
Graph tech makes replacement saddles for these
For all the hokey bridge that Dove sounds great.
I don't know whether to love or hate that Dove.
Congrats on 100k! Thanks for the videos.
Watching this as I finalize the ends of frets I just installed in a bound fretboard. Thanks Ted, this was the first time I used fish glue, a tang nipper (homemade), and a Chinese knockoff Jaws. All of which I learned from watching this channel. Previously I filled slots from the end with CA, cut the tangs with a Dremel and a cutoff wheel, and just pounding with a hammer. This Harmony I'm working on had an even worse fretboard, divots, missing chunks, and substantial amounts of finger grunge. Yummy!! 🤣🤣😋😋
I’ll chime in… thank you for your great videos 👍🏻 I love your attention to detail in every step no matter how complicated or „easy“ the task is and no matter how valuable your patient is. No guesswork and no dirty try and error. Fantastic craftsmanship knowledge and entertainment✌🏻
Great video as usual, congrats on the 100k subscribers.
100,000 subs! Woo hoo! Congrats!
Gibson made some Hummingbirds with maple back and sides. They were the same as Dove bodies. They may have had surplus Dove bodies and just ran some Hummingbirds with those bodies.
My favorite part is hearing them played at the end!
Experience outweighs book learning every time. (Yet, the book learning brought us to the place of: This didn't work right last time, what if I....) Keep on educating us to save us from ourselves! Really appreciate your videos!
Thanks for playing them for us Ted.
Congrats on well deserved 100k subs! All the best wishes for the future of your channel!
Nice to see you're back in the saddle, Ted! 😄
Gibson has actually started to bring back the nylon saddles, with some Norlin era reissue models. I doubt they will go beyond that though.
Actually some of the Murphy labs guitars do as well, I know the 1964 335 does at least
I had this exact guitar. Mine was made in 1981. Paid $180 for it. Once you warmed up on it and the top really started to move, it sounded pretty good. Wish I still had it.
Excellent thoughts you expressed,re the Yamaha tha thank you, regards Don from Hamilton NZ on my Wife's tablet
Another excellent tutorial Ted. I can't thank you enough buddy.
That Dove is gorgeous
Congrats on 100K subs!
I have been using the Jescar fret wire for years. They have just about any size wire you would want. I love their ENVO gold wire. Harder that regular wire but softer than stainless. Easy to work and withstands punishment much better than standard wire. Dearly enjoy your video's. Keep em coming.
Damn that Gibson is beautiful.
Thanks for the Jescar Fret size tip, fella!! That'll definitely come in handy....
You're the best :)
I have almost the same Yamaha guitar, I think it's an FD 320. My father bought it way back and I kind of inherited it, when I started to play guitar. I really needs a neck reset, unfortunately, but for now, I will just continue to play it.
I love the maple sound
Thank you, Ted!~
Great video. I had a lot of suspicions about rigid neck jigs for set up work. You confirmed most of them.
The Gibson Hummingbird's back and side are made of mahogany, whereas the back and side of the Gibson Dove are made of flame maple. The Gibson Dove's scale length is 25.5 inches, whereas the scale length on the Hummingbird is 24.75 inches.6 days ago
My favourite fret wire for acoustic guitars now is StewMac #155 which is .080” wide and .050” high. That’s 2.032mm X 1.27mm. Perfect for me for getting a good grip without pressing hard. Anything 1mm or under I find virtually unplayable on acoustic or electric.
Thank You Mr. Woodford
Sir I've been playing guitar since I was 10. I'm getting to 66 , and to tell the truth; I've always hated luthiers because they would never show me how to do anything even though I asked many times.
I can't believe you're showing it all off.
Thanks
I like the sound of that Jescar 0.045" fret wire. I also deal with Next Gen and will be asking for it in future. Also, Graph Tech make white, Tusq inserts for Gibson ABR Bridges.
I have a 1972 Yamaha FG160 that I’ve owned since I was a kid. The frets need to be replaced as there is significant wear in the “cowboy chord” area, but I’m weighing the cost versus value. Also, it came with very low and thin frets which, when I was learning seemed normal to me, but now are strange feeling. It’s in remarkably good shape, but I don’t play it too often.
Been slowly watching plenty of your videos - So have you ever considered doing a compilation of the finishing mini music sessions?
Very cool, congrats in advance on 100k subscribers, well deserved.
100K subs! Congratulations.