Thanks Ben for another awesome video! By the way, in response to ruclips.net/video/tCCEN-04WLk/видео.html: found your dust mask right there at ruclips.net/video/tCCEN-04WLk/видео.html
Will you make a guitar for me if i call you papa? I'll never talk back and I'll do my chores without you asking🤣... your videos are awesome keep up the great work!!!
A thing that Apple did in Mac Pro gleefully nicknamed the cheese grater is that they used a ball end mill not a flat end mill. Your results are super cool, it kinda looks like it has a resonant chamber there. The Apple one is more flowing though. Just wanted to share so that maybe you'll use it for future experiments.
There's just a hint of overworking the strings in most of the limited playing I've seen (or it could just be a recording thing, engineered for speech), as in hitting it harder than what suits the music. It just feels like his playing style lends itself for some unyielding metal instead of what he usually plays.
Back in the late 80's a pal of mine took an import Strat type body and went to work with hole saws of various diameters, drilling completely through the body. He painted the results a nice yellow, installed a 12 string neck and bridge, and dubbed it "Swiss Cheese". It sounded really good.
When I was a child, my father wanted me to follow his passion with woodwind instruments...a few years later he discovered drum sticks I had bought at a local music store. It broke dad's heart but I still play and own the drums that replaced my clarinet. I hope your efforts are rewarded and your daughter learns and enjoys the fruits of her father's occupation. :)
lol at least your dad was somewhat supportive, my mom told me I would never play guitar any good, I can't sing because I wasn't born with the talent to do so. And yes she said it like that, thinking it was tough love and not discouragement. Today she is eating her words since I can pop off the Serrana Arpeggios from Jason Becker, and I can now sing Micro Cuts by Muse (very hard song to sing, if you've heard it you will know why) and my current useble (meaning I can form words at that pitch) vocal range sits at a C2 - B6. I just didn't listen when she told me that. She had never heard me play or sing when she said it that was the real kicker.
@@evilcowboy I hate negativity, and parents are often the ones who begin that demeaning process. I didn't have a mother, she divorced my dad before I was 5. I was raised by my grandmother who played piano and loved music. My dad saw me only on weekends. :)
@@evilcowboy Hmmm. It seems to me the "tough love" worked. You did it in spite of her accusation, which was what she wanted for you all along. She couldn't teach you or even guide you in the direction of music, therefore, she said you couldn't do it, hoping it would make you figure a way. Guess what. Her method of "guidance" worked. That's the way some taught. The way where everyone does NOT win a trophy. That should make your "trophy" that much more meaningful. Congratulations on having a mother that cares for you. Remember her on Mothers Day....and today. Call her. My mother passed away in 1989. I was 24 years old. All I can do is remember.
Looking forward to seeing how the custom forged circular cell honeycomb tuners look in part 12 of the series. For weight relief I’m going to say 2.1 lbs.
Love your process, Ben. The viewer can practically see the creativity emitting from you head as it happens! Thanks for letting us tag along on your adventures!
True story: A colleague at work once showed me an electric guitar with many holes drilled through its body in a similar fashion. "Is this not a COOL guitar?" he said. After a little thought, I replied unto him, "It's certainly well-ventilated."
Hi! When i was a full-time bass maker, weight was the main reason my clients came to my shop. I started to think ways yo reduce it, and managed to lower it to 3,1kg in average for a 5 strings :D
I guessed 3.27 lbs and got a heart too. So I'm guessing we're damn close. I did not go through the comments when I guessed either...just kinda blurted out 3.27, like Rainman in his K-mart underwear..
Interesting 3D-effect. I say the weight relief so far is about 422 gramm. As this is my first comment on any of your videos, I have to thank you for - at this point - some years of awesome enterainment, invaluable knowedge, some great tools and not least my very first few selfmade guitars. Your content has always been inspiring. Cheers.
That's excellent. Even though I've just watched you do it, I can't figure out how it looks so hollow. I wonder how it will feel when your arm is resting on it?
Walking out the dividers like that is how you lay out rivet patterns for helicopters/ airplanes. I was just doing that a few minutes ago. Im watching you on my lunch break
'Puckered the old proverbials' - I'm gonna use this all the time now! It'd definitely be great to see this guitar painted clean silver like the iMac, maybe make a bit of an Apple style guitar with it with their clean aesthetic
Well, since you like to make it difficult for you... go on with it and make the holes look like a honeycomb 😂😂 Looks awesome so far! I'm lookinf forward to the finishing process 😎🔥
The effect of the overlapping holes front and back is really cool. Makes the body appear to be hollow. I am curious as to how you treat all of those sharp edges. So here is my suggestion. In my woodworking I hate sharp edges and corners (due to chipping and the finish wearing off of those sharp corners) so I keep a 1/16” round over router bit loaded in a small trim router (with the offset base). I find that little round over is hardly noticeable and much nicer to the touch. You will still have to quickly touch that little round with a piece of 150 grit sandpaper, but that goes really quickly. My guess is that you have removed 2.7 lbs/1226 grams of material. And I am betting that your daughter will be absolutely thrilled with her “new”, and very unique, axe. One of these days I am going to have to try my hand at building a guitar.
I adore how just *beastly* that guitar looks and then the weight comes up XD And of course I love the purple. I went "Oh wow." when I finally saw what you were doing. Looks great!
I love the look. My guess on the "weight loss" is 14oz. Or .397kg! This should be really great when finished. A great idea for weight removal and for a design change. ✌️
Dreamy... and my aspie brain seriously wants to put at least 10 dials in the holes in a very abstract way to control what? Who cares...would be madness and even keep the holes to pass through. Love the gentle nature of the color. You are a craftsman.
When you breach through the trem cavity how are you going to deal with the spring noise coming through from the other side are you afraid the pick ups are going to pick up anything ?would you wrap the springs in light flexible foam or make a small copper metal barrier in between?
Nice one, so far! I'm interested to see how/if the sound of the instrument has changed. I will admit I'm a little concerned that it might end up being a bit on the fragile side for a child's guitar. Edit: I'm guessing that you have removed the equivalent weight of 14 glass marbles, 3 quarter-inch steel washers, and a banana.
You are very patient Ben. How can you be so creative and patient at the same time. The straight lines of the holes clash with the curves of the body. Really like the overlap in the holes between the front and back. Thanks
Very cool video, and a cool finished guitar. Excellent work, sir!! One minor nit-pick from a machinist here; please wear safety glasses when you're operating that drill press! Never want to see anyone get hurt doing something they love. ;o)
Can I offer a possible word of advice to you as a father? My father plays. In 9th grade I took an interest in learning. He bought me a guitar and some books. I fumbled with them a few months, then quit. My freshman year of college Enter Sandman came out, my roommate said if I bought the tab book he could teach me how to read it. Over break I was home practicing the songs off that album, when my father, annoyed by their simple repetition, finally said, "Why don't you learn to play something else??" I threw it back at him: "Why don't you teach me something else??" So he taught me Stairway. And then many more songs after that. Years later I realized - I didn't want to learn how to play guitar. I wanted to learn how to play _from my dad_. Maybe your daughter doesn't want to learn. Maybe she wants to learn - from you.
I reckon the holes are larger than 20mm diameter - assuming Ben used the same drill bit as on the trial piece that you can see a steel rule in - maybe about 24-25mm? Also compare their relative size with the humbucker route, usually about 40mm wide.
9:02 I appreciate how you just let everything breathe by stopping the music and allowing the silence for a few seconds. That was very relaxing and gave me some time to catch up, reflect, and head onto the next part of the video with a better understanding. It's amazing how great just a few seconds of silence is!
I think that to make a guitar lighter I would start by routing out most of the area that is covered by the scratch plate - that being the low hanging fruit in this case as that material would not be missed from a visual aspect. A new scratch plate that could cover a wider area such as the top and bottom horn (as seen in guitars like the Burns Bison) would allow this hollowed area to be extended. In other guitar designs such as an LP style where the guitar would not have a scratch plate I would be tempted to use a band saw to completely remove the top allowing me to route out the majority of the body area below where said top sits before gluing it back on. I have no idea how well this would work, but then I am a hobbyist going through a thought exercise.
"We have to talk" is actually FOUR words that nobody really wants to hear. A good example of THREE words that nobody really wants to hear would be something more along the lines of "You have herpes".
btw have you shaved the neck? at around the 6:00 mark it looks quite big 🤷🏻 also, is it too hard to take like 1 cm of thickness out (before drilling) ?
My middle daughter asked me to build her a guitar because she wanted to learn to play. I just finished it. It's a one piece ash body with myrtlewood top, maple neck with ebony fretboard, myrtlewood binding and dots, and a myrtlewood headstock cap.
Same idea used to remove weight from hot rods in the fifty's. Holes of various diameters were drilled out of the inner doors along with the removal of most the nonessential interior.
I love handwork as much as, maybe more than, the next guy. It's one of the things I love most about your channel. That, and watching the incredible workmanship of a maker that I wish I had half the skill of. Still, this pattern should have been done on a CNC. But next best would have been a paper layout, like you said, but done in a graphic program and printed. You could have located front to back with 3 holes instead of one for each front hole. It looks awesome! Can't wait to see the finished project! Lucky me, Part 2 is already out!
Dad!!! I love it!!! My dad died when I was a kid. He was a mechanic and fixed up three wheelers and things like that for me. It's awesome to have a parent with such passion and passing it down to their kids. Very nice guitar!!
Great work & very inspiring man!! My guess is if it started over 10 lbs the final weight will be 6lbs 4oz! 🤞🙏 I was happy to see this is going into another episode. Looking forward to it!
It looks amazing! Are you going to give the holes a tiny round over? I feel like that would be even cooler. I’m guessing you’ve pulled 3lb 8.5oz out of it so far.
I have to agree with everything he says in this video. I'm a beginner myself, so I'm happy to get high quality guitars for a really good price. But of course I will upgrade to something like the Fender when I feel I am ready. It's not an entirely rational decision, it's got an emotive element. Playing music is art, there is an element of the love of the history/tradition, of brand tribalism, of appreciation of the craftsmanship of the instrument, of being part of a clique with others who have the same specific preferences, of emulation of the stars you look up to, of supporting the company (and manufacturing location if its important) and all these are fine, they arent meant in a negative way, rather they round out the hobby. Would I pay an extra 1000 for an original Fender? Yes, undoubtedly, at the right time of my musical career. Well, not a Fender for me personally, as I am a metalhead and have the same attachment to Ibanez for their place in the metal community as others have for Fenders, which is kind of a case in point. It's not exactly rational, but it's meaningful to me.
Very cool! I figured since you asked, I was thinking of having a slight taper on each hole. Not sure tool would do the job but that's what popped in my head. Looks sweet man!
I've never seen anything quite like it. Can't wait to see the next episode! It looks like it will be sorta fragile, and it's anyone's guess as to how it will sound. I subscribed just to find out...
Welcome to the party 🥳 and thank you 😊 I expect her to sound closer to a 335 or at the very least a tele thinline, though the pickup is wrong for that exact tone.. fragile, nope.. I've always been amazed by just how string wood is.. just think, the sides on your average acoustic guitar are only around 2mm thick! We've got weigh more than that here.. (see what i did there.. did you?... uh, I'll see myself out now!
I have a question not related to the video content: In the intro at 0:26 it looks like you built a LP style guitar with the circuits printed on the surface. Are those functional circuits? I've been thinking for awhile about building a guitar with the circuits as inlays on the surface, but haven't been able to find any examples of this done. I would love some info on this build if that's what you did. thanks!
Hey.. they were not functional in this case but I have done something a little like that once that did serve a purpose.. go for it, as long as they are not in a position where the player will short circuit them while playing and you're golden..
Awesome effect. I might very well take to one of my cheaper gats in a similar manner with the drill. Might be fun to fill with some epoxy with some embedded LEDs for some fun effects. I feel duty-bound to point out that you only needed two datum points drilled all the way through, from which you could have developed your entire pattern on the back. I'm sure your daughter will love it.
Beat you! my mate sold me his tele copy he made about 35 years ago . Ash body, so heavy he drilled it out like a honeycomb .in fact there is the body of a bee in one of the cells god knows how he got there. it gave the guitar a really different tone . I love it and it plays like a dream.
Started at 4.666kg with the neck, I'd say 3.9kg without the neck, 3.8kg without the hardware, and roughly 20% of the material removed? Around the 3,100g mark?
is there still enough material there to be put under stress with strings or will it just break apart when you try to string it back up? *pops pop corn - waits
No where near being neck heavy, though the locking tuners really are quite weighty.. we could remove some weight from the headstock and change tuners if needed.
How do you conceptualize this stuff? The end result of the layout of those holes, that hollow look? Have you considered a “bath tub” rout for further weight reduction? My guess is 22oz to date. Oh, metallic leaf the bare wood on the inside. Just a thought…
I was like damn! He removed 10 pounds from that guitar? Oh its a 10 pound guitar... wait that's not heavy! My trombone weighs that and you gotta hold it with one hand the whole time.
Greetings from South Florida USA. This is the first time I've seen open chambering on a guitar body. It's usually hidden under a 1/4" (7mm) top. My only caution is when you do the refinishing. The newly exposed wood could use up a bit more paint thus adding a bit of weight. But if you burn it....... Thanks for your informative and fun videos.
seeing the 3d design when you were figuring out the drilling specs made me think how awesome it would look if you made a similar pattern but more like honeycomb
The first 1,000 people to use this link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: skl.sh/crimsoncustomguitars10211
Thanks Ben for another awesome video! By the way, in response to ruclips.net/video/tCCEN-04WLk/видео.html: found your dust mask right there at ruclips.net/video/tCCEN-04WLk/видео.html
Will you make a guitar for me if i call you papa? I'll never talk back and I'll do my chores without you asking🤣... your videos are awesome keep up the great work!!!
Paint it in bright colors and add some glitter and blinking LEDs. In other words BLING IT UP!
*Could you kindly post the link to part 3, please?*
A thing that Apple did in Mac Pro gleefully nicknamed the cheese grater is that they used a ball end mill not a flat end mill. Your results are super cool, it kinda looks like it has a resonant chamber there. The Apple one is more flowing though. Just wanted to share so that maybe you'll use it for future experiments.
“This is turning into a bit more of a project than I thought” should be the next Crimson T-Shirt design.
Kind of sums up every build perfectly.
I think he protests too much.
I rarely watch this guy but straight up I would buy that t-shirt. That shit is my every day life lol.
If u havent been in that position, U have never done a project 🤷🏻♂️🙈
Ben every episode: "I'm a guitar builder not a guitar player"
Also Ben: *plays guitar pretty damn well*
I make guitars sound good, but not playing them. I can fix the hell out of them. Frustrated guitarist.
He put in some time in the OTHER woodshed during the plague.
There's just a hint of overworking the strings in most of the limited playing I've seen (or it could just be a recording thing, engineered for speech), as in hitting it harder than what suits the music. It just feels like his playing style lends itself for some unyielding metal instead of what he usually plays.
Now imagine this guitar standing alone on stage before the show, backlit from below and with light smoke floating through the pattern 🎸
Smoke machine guitar! Woohoo!
Oh I want b-roll of this
are you high?
@@benburnett8109 Not yet, that's what the smoke is for...
For Snoop Dogg's band?
Back in the late 80's a pal of mine took an import Strat type body and went to work with hole saws of various diameters, drilling completely through the body. He painted the results a nice yellow, installed a 12 string neck and bridge, and dubbed it "Swiss Cheese". It sounded really good.
When ben says it will be a two part, we can be sure it will be a minimal of three maybe even four.
Two parts per episode for the planned 10 episode series.
More likely 5-10... because REASONS!!! 😁
The Complication v2
@@LRBerry v3
@@redknight1322 Well I could make it a headless guitar.... And how about a hollowbody?
We Have To Talk:- "Three words nobody wants to hear..."
I demand a recount!😁
Great Michael Scott moment.
Three words? Forget how to fucking count?
hahahaha... exactly
@@BackyardRambo ...that was the joke in the video...
When I was a child, my father wanted me to follow his passion with woodwind instruments...a few years later he discovered drum sticks I had bought at a local music store. It broke dad's heart but I still play and own the drums that replaced my clarinet. I hope your efforts are rewarded and your daughter learns and enjoys the fruits of her father's occupation. :)
lol at least your dad was somewhat supportive, my mom told me I would never play guitar any good, I can't sing because I wasn't born with the talent to do so. And yes she said it like that, thinking it was tough love and not discouragement.
Today she is eating her words since I can pop off the Serrana Arpeggios from Jason Becker, and I can now sing Micro Cuts by Muse (very hard song to sing, if you've heard it you will know why) and my current useble (meaning I can form words at that pitch) vocal range sits at a C2 - B6. I just didn't listen when she told me that. She had never heard me play or sing when she said it that was the real kicker.
@@evilcowboy I hate negativity, and parents are often the ones who begin that demeaning process. I didn't have a mother, she divorced my dad before I was 5. I was raised by my grandmother who played piano and loved music. My dad saw me only on weekends. :)
@@evilcowboy
Hmmm. It seems to me the "tough love" worked. You did it in spite of her accusation, which was what she wanted for you all along.
She couldn't teach you or even guide you in the direction of music, therefore, she said you couldn't do it, hoping it would make you figure a way.
Guess what. Her method of "guidance" worked. That's the way some taught. The way where everyone does NOT win a trophy. That should make your "trophy" that much more meaningful. Congratulations on having a mother that cares for you.
Remember her on Mothers Day....and today. Call her.
My mother passed away in 1989. I was 24 years old. All I can do is remember.
Trypohobia
@@RalphSampson... couldn't that be accomplished with a more challenging tone rather than a demeaning tone?
"This is turning into more of a project than I thought"
*Somewhere back at Crimson HQ an intern sighs and resets a clock*
“I built her a guitar”, “burn it”… yep; I can sympathise.
31:15 I knew something scary was heading to the window.
Looking forward to seeing how the custom forged circular cell honeycomb tuners look in part 12 of the series. For weight relief I’m going to say 2.1 lbs.
Love your process, Ben. The viewer can practically see the creativity emitting from you head as it happens! Thanks for letting us tag along on your adventures!
True story:
A colleague at work once showed me an electric guitar with many holes drilled through its body in a similar fashion. "Is this not a COOL guitar?" he said.
After a little thought, I replied unto him, "It's certainly well-ventilated."
Was that guy by chance RON THAL???
I’ve got to say making a wooden table for my pillar drill was one of the best things I did after buying a pillar drill
Hi! When i was a full-time bass maker, weight was the main reason my clients came to my shop. I started to think ways yo reduce it, and managed to lower it to 3,1kg in average for a 5 strings :D
Take my money!!! 💸💸💸
The effect looks amazing, would love to try this with a single cut guitar. My guess on weight relief up to this point 3.25 lbs.
Go watch Texas Toasts vid. Drilling those little azz holes doesn't take any weight out at all.
@@JC-11111 it does when you drill 20 of them…
If you are removing material you are removing weight. It's just simple physics.
I guessed 3.27 lbs and got a heart too. So I'm guessing we're damn close. I did not go through the comments when I guessed either...just kinda blurted out 3.27, like Rainman in his K-mart underwear..
I love how you get all nervous like you wouldn’t just grab a new blank if you messed it up. 🤣 It looks great, man.
Interesting 3D-effect. I say the weight relief so far is about 422 gramm. As this is my first comment on any of your videos, I have to thank you for - at this point - some years of awesome enterainment, invaluable knowedge, some great tools and not least my very first few selfmade guitars. Your content has always been inspiring.
Cheers.
Most teenage kids hide their marijuana from their parents. You had to hide your drumsticks. We grew up different's all I'm sayin'.
Man, a fretless bass with this would be dreamy.
You have me interested in the kit option. The attention to detail and patience you have is the reason I watch your videos.
That's excellent. Even though I've just watched you do it, I can't figure out how it looks so hollow. I wonder how it will feel when your arm is resting on it?
Walking out the dividers like that is how you lay out rivet patterns for helicopters/ airplanes. I was just doing that a few minutes ago. Im watching you on my lunch break
Alright.. your job is officially cooler than mine!
'Puckered the old proverbials' - I'm gonna use this all the time now!
It'd definitely be great to see this guitar painted clean silver like the iMac, maybe make a bit of an Apple style guitar with it with their clean aesthetic
I would pay for something like this, even if I'd rarely if ever play it. Such craftsmanship is commendable
Well, since you like to make it difficult for you... go on with it and make the holes look like a honeycomb 😂😂
Looks awesome so far! I'm lookinf forward to the finishing process 😎🔥
The effect of the overlapping holes front and back is really cool. Makes the body appear to be hollow. I am curious as to how you treat all of those sharp edges. So here is my suggestion.
In my woodworking I hate sharp edges and corners (due to chipping and the finish wearing off of those sharp corners) so I keep a 1/16” round over router bit loaded in a small trim router (with the offset base). I find that little round over is hardly noticeable and much nicer to the touch. You will still have to quickly touch that little round with a piece of 150 grit sandpaper, but that goes really quickly.
My guess is that you have removed 2.7 lbs/1226 grams of material. And I am betting that your daughter will be absolutely thrilled with her “new”, and very unique, axe.
One of these days I am going to have to try my hand at building a guitar.
Haha! I laughed exactly like you, when you ended the drilling! It looks so incredibly cool!
I adore how just *beastly* that guitar looks and then the weight comes up XD And of course I love the purple. I went "Oh wow." when I finally saw what you were doing. Looks great!
I love the look. My guess on the "weight loss" is 14oz. Or .397kg! This should be really great when finished. A great idea for weight removal and for a design change. ✌️
Dreamy... and my aspie brain seriously wants to put at least 10 dials in the holes in a very abstract way to control what? Who cares...would be madness and even keep the holes to pass through. Love the gentle nature of the color. You are a craftsman.
When you breach through the trem cavity how are you going to deal with the spring noise coming through from the other side are you afraid the pick ups are going to pick up anything ?would you wrap the springs in light flexible foam or make a small copper metal barrier in between?
That's sick ill be back for part 2 you got my subscription
You should add LED lights! It would enhance the pattern in a spectacular way!
Nice one, so far! I'm interested to see how/if the sound of the instrument has changed.
I will admit I'm a little concerned that it might end up being a bit on the fragile side for a child's guitar.
Edit: I'm guessing that you have removed the equivalent weight of 14 glass marbles, 3 quarter-inch steel washers, and a banana.
What size hole in the washers?
Interesting pattern, I'd say 1.5 kilograms. How do you plan to highlight the interior pattern? Two tone finish? Interior much lighter and glossy?
You are very patient Ben. How can you be so creative and patient at the same time.
The straight lines of the holes clash with the curves of the body. Really like the overlap in the holes between the front and back.
Thanks
Anyone else noticing that this video has ghosts?
Very cool video, and a cool finished guitar. Excellent work, sir!!
One minor nit-pick from a machinist here; please wear safety glasses when you're operating that drill press! Never want to see anyone get hurt doing something they love.
;o)
thank you, and fair point, I really do need to wear eye protection more than I do!
Ok, this is coming along nicely, subbed!
thank you, and welcome to the channel!
Can I offer a possible word of advice to you as a father? My father plays. In 9th grade I took an interest in learning. He bought me a guitar and some books. I fumbled with them a few months, then quit. My freshman year of college Enter Sandman came out, my roommate said if I bought the tab book he could teach me how to read it. Over break I was home practicing the songs off that album, when my father, annoyed by their simple repetition, finally said, "Why don't you learn to play something else??" I threw it back at him: "Why don't you teach me something else??" So he taught me Stairway. And then many more songs after that. Years later I realized - I didn't want to learn how to play guitar. I wanted to learn how to play _from my dad_.
Maybe your daughter doesn't want to learn. Maybe she wants to learn - from you.
Even with all the wood you removed, I’m betting you really only took away like 18-20oz so far. Love the look though. Super neat.
Not even close
Assuming holes of 10mm radius, body of thickness 42mm, and swamp ash with density 500kg/m^3.
I reckon you removed about 0.37kg
The holes look a lot bigger than 10mm
@@gooseholla1 : radius and diameter are not interchangeable.
I reckon the holes are larger than 20mm diameter - assuming Ben used the same drill bit as on the trial piece that you can see a steel rule in - maybe about 24-25mm? Also compare their relative size with the humbucker route, usually about 40mm wide.
Can´t wait to see it finished! 😁🤙
9:02 I appreciate how you just let everything breathe by stopping the music and allowing the silence for a few seconds. That was very relaxing and gave me some time to catch up, reflect, and head onto the next part of the video with a better understanding. It's amazing how great just a few seconds of silence is!
Thank you for the positive comments, I will pass them on our editor. Really appreciated. DC
Brings new meaning to the old adage: Less is More.
Ben Crowe:- "I'm going to drill a load of big holes in a Strat body"
Russ Ballard:- I approve of this message"
Love your videos, I will watch all 5 of this series.
I think that to make a guitar lighter I would start by routing out most of the area that is covered by the scratch plate - that being the low hanging fruit in this case as that material would not be missed from a visual aspect. A new scratch plate that could cover a wider area such as the top and bottom horn (as seen in guitars like the Burns Bison) would allow this hollowed area to be extended. In other guitar designs such as an LP style where the guitar would not have a scratch plate I would be tempted to use a band saw to completely remove the top allowing me to route out the majority of the body area below where said top sits before gluing it back on. I have no idea how well this would work, but then I am a hobbyist going through a thought exercise.
This is the one where Ben finds out his daughter has trypophobia
"We have to talk" is actually FOUR words that nobody really wants to hear. A good example of THREE words that nobody really wants to hear would be something more along the lines of "You have herpes".
Um.. I was just checking.. ah, just making sure you guys were on the ball with the whole counting thing.. you know?
My nominee for 3 words that no guy ever wants to hear is “Is it in”?
@@bigk4755 Runner up: "Is that it??"
@@mallninja9805 usually followed closely with belittling laughter.
@@bigk4755 How about "say", rather then "hear"?
btw have you shaved the neck? at around the 6:00 mark it looks quite big 🤷🏻
also, is it too hard to take like 1 cm of thickness out (before drilling) ?
Hey dude, haven't chanced upon your videos for a while. It's nice to see you again, you make great videos
Thank you James, I really appreciate this!
Welcome back and thank you. DC
My middle daughter asked me to build her a guitar because she wanted to learn to play. I just finished it. It's a one piece ash body with myrtlewood top, maple neck with ebony fretboard, myrtlewood binding and dots, and a myrtlewood headstock cap.
Sounds incredible, lucky girl!
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars
A gallery on your site of guitars built with your tool/supplies would be cool.
Same idea used to remove weight from hot rods in the fifty's. Holes of various diameters were drilled out of the inner doors along with the removal of most the nonessential interior.
I love handwork as much as, maybe more than, the next guy. It's one of the things I love most about your channel. That, and watching the incredible workmanship of a maker that I wish I had half the skill of.
Still, this pattern should have been done on a CNC.
But next best would have been a paper layout, like you said, but done in a graphic program and printed. You could have located front to back with 3 holes instead of one for each front hole.
It looks awesome! Can't wait to see the finished project! Lucky me, Part 2 is already out!
Dad!!! I love it!!!
My dad died when I was a kid. He was a mechanic and fixed up three wheelers and things like that for me. It's awesome to have a parent with such passion and passing it down to their kids. Very nice guitar!!
Hallo dear Ben, this guitar transformed into a very modern and impressive Guitar already! I am curious to watch the next episode with new finish! :-)👌
Great work & very inspiring man!! My guess is if it started over 10 lbs the final weight will be 6lbs 4oz! 🤞🙏 I was happy to see this is going into another episode. Looking forward to it!
It looks amazing! Are you going to give the holes a tiny round over? I feel like that would be even cooler.
I’m guessing you’ve pulled 3lb 8.5oz out of it so far.
Looks really good!! I had my doubts but it looks great!
I probably just would have bought her an air guitar at this point! The ultimate light guitar that everyone needs in their collection!
You sir, are a true artist and master of your trade. I always enjoy seeing all your creativity at work.
Thank you very much. So great to have positive feedback. DC
First time here. May I first say a fine craftsman with an envious shop. Also, the head ink is superb and unique.
thank you and thank you :)
I have to agree with everything he says in this video. I'm a beginner myself, so I'm happy to get high quality guitars for a really good price. But of course I will upgrade to something like the Fender when I feel I am ready.
It's not an entirely rational decision, it's got an emotive element. Playing music is art, there is an element of the love of the history/tradition, of brand tribalism, of appreciation of the craftsmanship of the instrument, of being part of a clique with others who have the same specific preferences, of emulation of the stars you look up to, of supporting the company (and manufacturing location if its important) and all these are fine, they arent meant in a negative way, rather they round out the hobby.
Would I pay an extra 1000 for an original Fender? Yes, undoubtedly, at the right time of my musical career. Well, not a Fender for me personally, as I am a metalhead and have the same attachment to Ibanez for their place in the metal community as others have for Fenders, which is kind of a case in point. It's not exactly rational, but it's meaningful to me.
well said!
I love how he is saying how the wiring is crap and all that, but he built it a few years ago. Good to recognize your own skill improvements.
Very cool Ben, love the way that this guitar is going. I am thinking a loss of 750g so far. Looking forward to how you are going to finish it.
This looks super cool! Will you remove the remaining material between the two surfaces (those little posts) to match the Mac?
Very cool! I figured since you asked, I was thinking of having a slight taper on each hole. Not sure tool would do the job but that's what popped in my head. Looks sweet man!
"That puckered the odd proverbials". OK, that's going in my quote bank!
Wow. What a beautiful effect that gives the guitar. Great idea
Thank you. I'm really excited to see this under finish now!
That looks amazing. Love it!
Watching this video, it was posted 6 days ago, can't wait for the 2nd video.
will the hollowness from the chambering cause it to feedback worse.
I've never seen anything quite like it. Can't wait to see the next episode! It looks like it will be sorta fragile, and it's anyone's guess as to how it will sound. I subscribed just to find out...
Welcome to the party 🥳 and thank you 😊 I expect her to sound closer to a 335 or at the very least a tele thinline, though the pickup is wrong for that exact tone.. fragile, nope.. I've always been amazed by just how string wood is.. just think, the sides on your average acoustic guitar are only around 2mm thick! We've got weigh more than that here.. (see what i did there.. did you?... uh, I'll see myself out now!
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars oh, I definitely saw it. Your sense of humor is great, and you're so opun to trying new things.
😁Did you see it?🤭
I have a question not related to the video content: In the intro at 0:26 it looks like you built a LP style guitar with the circuits printed on the surface. Are those functional circuits? I've been thinking for awhile about building a guitar with the circuits as inlays on the surface, but haven't been able to find any examples of this done. I would love some info on this build if that's what you did. thanks!
Hey.. they were not functional in this case but I have done something a little like that once that did serve a purpose.. go for it, as long as they are not in a position where the player will short circuit them while playing and you're golden..
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars Thanks for the response! I think I'll give it a try. Thanks for all the awesome videos too, I've learned a lot!
Awesome effect. I might very well take to one of my cheaper gats in a similar manner with the drill. Might be fun to fill with some epoxy with some embedded LEDs for some fun effects. I feel duty-bound to point out that you only needed two datum points drilled all the way through, from which you could have developed your entire pattern on the back. I'm sure your daughter will love it.
Ak! Of course you ate right.. 2 points easily filled.. now I really feel a little dim! Lol
Loving this new weight relief series
I love your work. Would you ever consider having some fibre optics included in a build?
If my dad built guitars like yours I'd constantly be requesting things😁
sick ! I so need to do this/get this done on the body of my double neck :S
Beat you! my mate sold me his tele copy he made about 35 years ago . Ash body, so heavy he drilled it out like a honeycomb .in fact there is the body of a bee in one of the cells god knows how he got there. it gave the guitar a really different tone . I love it and it plays like a dream.
Started at 4.666kg with the neck, I'd say 3.9kg without the neck, 3.8kg without the hardware, and roughly 20% of the material removed?
Around the 3,100g mark?
is there still enough material there to be put under stress with strings or will it just break apart when you try to string it back up? *pops pop corn - waits
this looks totally cool. I'd guess 523 grams removed. What a cool idea. Can't wait to see it finished!!
This is beautiful! Just wondering how all the drilling has affected the structural strength of the body of the guitar...
Is it gonna be neck heavy now? And, how would you make the neck lighter?
No where near being neck heavy, though the locking tuners really are quite weighty.. we could remove some weight from the headstock and change tuners if needed.
le résultat est sublime, hâte de voir cette guitare finie
"This is turning into a bit more of a project than I thought" really no kidding.
I have 10 string guitar
The neck is too heavy, I can't play it without strap
Can I drill it a little bit for balance weight?
The only place you can reduce weight on a neck would be the headstock. DC
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars Oh I see
I will try it
Thanks a lot 😀
Beautiful work. How long did the whole process take?
How do you conceptualize this stuff? The end result of the layout of those holes, that hollow look? Have you considered a “bath tub” rout for further weight reduction?
My guess is 22oz to date. Oh, metallic leaf the bare wood on the inside. Just a thought…
I was like damn! He removed 10 pounds from that guitar? Oh its a 10 pound guitar... wait that's not heavy!
My trombone weighs that and you gotta hold it with one hand the whole time.
trombones are that heavy!? wow.. guitarists are WIMPS! lol
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars They must be 😂. It's a beautiful build though!! That 3D pattern turned out awesome
Ben I'm going with 2.45lbs weight relief so far, great video looking forward to the next part.
Greetings from South Florida USA. This is the first time I've seen open chambering on a guitar body. It's usually hidden under a 1/4" (7mm) top. My only caution is when you do the refinishing. The newly exposed wood could use up a bit more paint thus adding a bit of weight. But if you burn it.......
Thanks for your informative and fun videos.
seeing the 3d design when you were figuring out the drilling specs made me think how awesome it would look if you made a similar pattern but more like honeycomb
Definitely a cool look and you’ve got me thinking about other shaped holes now! I reckon you might have managed to shed 467g
I love all your guitars!
She might like it more if you add a floyd rose. Every guitar needs one. Even acoustics.
lol. I'll ask :)
I think the "down" Side of the Guitar would actually look cool with some of the holes too...as Always astonishing Work!!!