Комментарии •

  • @markrock7
    @markrock7 28 дней назад +2

    Awesome video. I love how calm you are; I'd be a wreck doing something that requires that level of skill!

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 28 дней назад

      Thanks a lot. It's actually a little less nerve-wracking working on something like that that is not functional: you can't really make it worse.

  • @billdedrick1914
    @billdedrick1914 Год назад +3

    Gary, very interesting video/documentation on this Martin.. It looks very familiar...Great impeccable workmanship and presently it is sounding better than ever.

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 Год назад

      I'm so glad to hear that, Bill. Thank you for asking me to do the work on it.

  • @mvecellio1
    @mvecellio1 Год назад +1

    Great job once again. Must be the truss rod would not take out that hump in the middle. small fixes become big fixes. Good thing they brought it to you

  • @rcote1234
    @rcote1234 Год назад

    Fantastic job. Thanks for sharing. I imagine that D18 plays and sounds much better!

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 Год назад +1

      Yes, according to the owner, it plays the way it should.

  • @WorldsOkayistGuitarPlayer
    @WorldsOkayistGuitarPlayer 8 месяцев назад +1

    I really wanted to see how full the SwearJar got during the epoxy removal!

  • @robtangent4664
    @robtangent4664 4 месяца назад +1

    After watching your video, I exam my Martin D18 and could not find my truss rod adjustment hole. All I saw was a piece of wood without the Allen key hole. Isn't this unusual?

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 4 месяца назад

      Martin didn't start installing adjustable truss rods until around 1985. Before then, their necks had a square steel rod to help counter the string tension and there was no adjustment. So if your guitar is more than 40 years old, you don't have an adjustable rod.

    • @robtangent4664
      @robtangent4664 4 месяца назад +1

      @@zimnickiguitars311Got it. I bought it new in the early 80's. So I guess this would make them less valuable, eh? Busy working, I've put this guitar away for many years. Now retired, I want to play again and find the strings too high for my old man fingers. To improve playability, I guess I need to take it to the pro. Thanks for your info.

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 4 месяца назад

      @robtangent4664 glad I could answer your question. Yes, take it to a professional.

    • @robtangent4664
      @robtangent4664 4 месяца назад

      @@zimnickiguitars311 Thank you Sir!

  • @TMoody
    @TMoody 11 месяцев назад +1

    Very good! Looks like it's a D 16, not an 18.

  • @biggie9817
    @biggie9817 11 месяцев назад

    When re-joining the fretboard at the cut, do you use fret wire as a gauge to achieve proper spacing?

  • @cisaac8819
    @cisaac8819 2 месяца назад

    What is the main reason for the russ rod broken?

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 2 месяца назад

      I do not know why it broke. Either someone tried to tighten it too much, or it was a poorly made truss rod .I do remember that the threaded part of the replacement rod was much wider, therefore stronger than the original.

  • @Andluth
    @Andluth Год назад

    Where did you get the replacement rod? Thanks

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 Год назад +2

      I had it for many years. Stewart Macdonald still sells that design.

    • @zimnickiguitars311
      @zimnickiguitars311 4 месяца назад

      @@missanthrope2 I guess it depends on how inexpensive of a guitar those stores are talking about.

  • @MacPakinga-gl8bu
    @MacPakinga-gl8bu 4 месяца назад

    How the hell do you break a Truss Rod 😮🤔.