Title: Learn To Repair Broken Guitar Neck
1Learn To
Repair
Broken
Guitar Neck
2Introduction
- How to fix a broken guitar neck and, depending on
the extent of the damage, how to make minor
cosmetic repairs. In this case, the guitar in
question is an Epiphone Les Paul Studio. - They're fantastic, inexpensive guitars in the
instance of the Epiphone... and, depending on the
extent of the break, these broken neck ones can
be a terrific deal for someone with the time and
tools to mend them. It's also possible to repair
the top of your Gibson ES335 if it's broken.
3The Anatomy of a Broken Neck
- Gravity, headstock geometry, and thin wood can
all combine to create a difficult predicament.
The images demonstrate how a clean break can
happen...
42. Here Are The Tools Needed
- Only the headstock has to be glued back on to
make the guitar fully playable again. You'll need
the following items to do so
5- 1. Clamps - The clamp kind displayed attracts to
me. Screw clamps, encourage users to really crank
it down, perhaps damaging the finish. It doesn't
have to be so tight. Several clamps of various
sizes work nicely purchase a full set of these
guitar parts online from FaberUSA or somewhere. - 2. Glue - There will be no miracle glue. White
glue is more powerful than wood. Use "wood" white
glue because it doesn't seem to run as much as
conventional white glue. In addition, the curing
time suits my needs. - 3. Water - for cleaning
- 4. A lot of paper towels
- 5. A little artist paintbrush (you may instead
use a large brush). It doesn't matter how big you
are in this game. - 6. Something to keep the neck in place - A whole
roll of paper towels will also enough.
63. Damage Inspection
- Examine the nature of the break to see if it's
worth mending to your satisfaction and ability. - What interesting to note is that the previous fix
held up just fine. The wood, not the old glue
joint, failed (again). However, this also
indicates that the wood on this neck is
relatively weak and would split just as quickly
and cleanly if it were dropped again. - Depending on the guitar, the split paint and
paint/wood interface may pose an issue. However,
in this situation, wood glue worked perfectly.
74. About Wood Strength and Stain Penetration
- Check the wood more attentively, the primary
break seemed to occur along a plane that sucked
up the dye quite deeply. This COULD suggest that
the wood along this plane was drier and possibly
weaker than the wood along nearby planes. - The wood close to the truss rod aperture cracked
on a separate plane. Maybe it was more powerful?
If the break occurred as detailed in step 1, the
truss rod area would have been the first to
fracture... After all, you're not so strong! So
microscopically studying the wood structure is
probably not necessary in this case.
85. Dry Fitting Glue Application
- This is a straightforward procedure. Simply put
the parts together to see how they fit. This
guitar was simple to play - just keep your
fingers together and you'll be fine. On other
guitars, you may need to place the part at an
angle, bounce it around a bit, or clear up some
bad wood spots. - Glue application idea is to acquire enough glue
that everything inside the repair is coated, but
not so much that the exterior is a complete
disaster to clean up.
96. Clamping and Assembly
- Make sure you have your clamps, water, and paper
towels on hand. This is not the time for
interruptions this phase must be finished in one
step. - The following are the major components
- Hand assembly
- Clamping at the start
- Take care of the mess
- Clamping (additional/final)
- There will be further cleanup.
107. Take Off the Clamps Wood Finish Work
- Theoretically, you could string up the guitar and
start playing if you wanted! The joint is solid
and will hold the tension. Everything after this
is just cosmetic. - Keep the wood finish work to a minimum. This can
get extremely frustrating and take you down a
long path of work that will just make things
looking worse.
118. Headstock Cleanup / Finishing
- The headstock was close, but not identical.
Instead of wood, we were working with paint. - 1. Get rid of the adhesive.
- 2. Use wet/dry sandpaper to try to clean it up
and level it. Start with 320 and progressed to
400, 600, then 800. Keep it wet and stay away
from the logo. - 3. Kiwi black shoe polish To achieve the same
sheen, can apply shoe polish to the entire
headstock.
129. Check All Set-up and Play!
- Now this is the time to check all the guitar
setup and tuning, whether it is working good or
not. - I hope now it is very clear to reader, how to
repair broken guitar neck.