Wednesday, 3 December 2008

Introduction To ThunderHouse Instruments

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On this page, I will indulge in selfless self promotion of my talents in the making of stringed musical instruments. My primary interest is in the design and construction of the electric bass guitar. However, once involved in this endeavor, it is hard not to dabble in acoustic basses, guitars and even violins.

My interest in Luthery began around 1970, although the love of music seems to have been with me from birth. My love affair with the bass guitar began to grow with leaps and bounds during those musically creative years encompassing the mid-60's to the mid-70's. Garage bands of every calibre began to spring up in virtually every neighbourhood, trying desperately to imitate their heroes, The Cream, Deep Purple, Jimi Hendrix, Mountain, The Who, Led Zeppelin and the like. It was a magical time...

The bass guitar was always the first instrument to betray the location of a band practice or "Jam", as you could always feel the notes long before they were ever heard. I was fascinated with this bottom end power, and my love affair with the bass had begun.
Not having the funds to purchase an instrument, I decided in some moment of creative insanity to make my own. Ignorance of the facts and lack of skills were to be no obstacle as teenage exuberance would make anything possible!

My father had at one time salvaged an old oak church pew which I cut out to mimic the style of a Fender Precision Bass, one of the most popular of the relatively few choices at the time. Poverty creates incentive for inspiration and improvisation, so, household items became incorporated into my first creation. Arborite made a functional pickguard while buttons served duty as fret markers.

One has to realize that instrument making in the late sixties and early seventies bore no resemblance to the musical instrument market of today. Independent manufactures of after-market replacement parts did not exist and that Luthery outside of the factories consisted of steel string and classical guitar craftsmen in limited numbers. If one wanted quality parts, you had to approach a major manufacturer and they often were not interested in selling hardware to amateurs, except when attached to their entire instrument.

I remember one particular incident when I approached a sales clerk at a Hamilton, Ontario, music store about the possibility of buying frets for my bass. He strongly suggested I not take this repair on myself but to bring in my instrument and have it sent out for professional work. My telling him that this was not a repair but rather that I was building a bass from scratch got nothing more than head shakes and chuckles. This wasn't a do it yourself job for a sixteen year old!! I retrieved the nearly finished bass from my friend's parked van and showed the salesman...I got my frets!

Had I met this salesman prior to starting, I may never have attempted the project, but I never knew it was an "impossible" task, so I just went ahead and did it. Inadvertently, I had learned an important lesson in life.
In the end, I found myself the owner of a natural finish, P-bass clone with original Fender hardware and electronics. Oak, although not considered to be a traditional instrument wood, did give that bass a unique look and tremendous sustain. The blond maple neck with black fret markers really set it off. It was a beautiful beast, albeit a heavy one. All I needed now was a guitar strap and guitar case...Yup, I made those, too!

University life and apartment living following graduation prevented my setting up a shop and further delayed my desire to squeeze musical notes from a tree. I did not pursue the passion again until about 1989. With my wife's support, I had been slowly building up the materials, tools and knowledge to build bass guitars once again.


The basement, which was to have been our second family room, now became "The Workshop". It was here that I designed and built the first ThunderHouse Instruments bass guitar.
I registered the company with the Province of Ontario as a business. I chose the name "ThunderHouse" for my love of canoeing. ThunderHouse Falls is located on the Missinaibi River in Northern Ontario. When standing on its granite foundation in the Canadian Shield, the roar of crashing water seems to be not only an audible sensation, but a physical one. The vibrations feel as if they are transmitted up through the body and can be heard from within.
Local natives years ago felt that these were the spirits of their departed relatives speaking to them from beyond. Those sensations reminded me of those inaudible bass notes emanating from some unseen practice session. I chose to accompany "ThunderHouse" with "Instruments" as I detest limitations and "Instruments" would encompass any project of mine, be it violins or dulcimers.

Having always been a do-it-yourself-er, I have recently been etching and assembling Printed Circuit Boards for on board preamplifier electronics and am about to resume experimenting with winding my own pickups, in which I had dabbled years ago.
With some regret, life has conspired to keep me from taking ThunderHouse Instruments to the next level. And so it remains a hobby much more than a thriving business. However, the smell of freshly cut wood still conjures up hope of what might someday be.

ThunderHouse Instruments currently produces a small number of hand crafted instruments per year. Several models in four- and five-string versions are available.
Instruments are made using the finest exotic woods, with three- to five-piece laminated, carbon fiber rod reinforced necks and a variety of fingerboard woods, including the traditional rosewood or ebony.
A variety of pickups and electronics will be offered. Finishes vary from the traditional nitrocellulose lacquer to the increasingly popular, environmentally friendly, water based finishes such as Hydrocote or Crystalac.

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Sunday, 2 November 2008

Gibson Les Paul Recording Guitar Rebuild



A few years ago I was approached by a fellow who had a Gibson Les Paul Recording Guitar which was a variation of the established model. Back in the early 1970s, Gibson began experimenting with new models such as the "Les Paul Recording." This model is often eschewed by guitar purists: considered too full of "gadgetry." The "Recording" featured low-impedance pickups, many switches and buttons, and a highly specialized cable for impedance-matching to the amplifier.

The instrument I received had a badly damaged finish. At one time someone had modified the instrument by removing the low impedance pickups and replaced them with traditional humbuckers. This entailed filling the original pickup cavities and re-routing new ones appropriate for the humbuckers.

As the instrument had no value in the condition that it was in, I proceeded to make it both playable and ascetically pleasing.

Below are a few of the steps in the progression of the rebuild.

(SelectedPhotos Follow Below)


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Stripping old finish off of the Guitar body using a 3-M environmentally safe paint stripper




Note Black Binding on previously black guitar
(Radius Fretboard Sanding Block in Foreground)


Sanding guitar body with random orbit sander


Leveling & Sanding fingerboard (Frets Removed)


Body spray painted with gloss black water based Hydrocote brand finish. Clearcoat Hydrocote sprayed as topcoat. Finish is "rubbed out" using a variety of abrasives from 'Micromesh' cloth to powdered abrasives such as Pumice and Rottenstone in water or paraffin oil. Final gloss is achieved with Meguier brand automotive finish compounds.

Making sure hardware fits. Caution! A nice tight fit may be reduced in size due to the thickness of the finish used.


Reverse of body (left) and laminated neck blank of an unrelated project.


New White binding attached to channel on guitar edge with Acetone based plastic cement.
Binding secured with tape while glue dries.


Rubbed Out Finish on reverse of body with contrasting white binding.


Rubbed out front with new white binding
(Fingerboard protected by masking tape)


Fret removal using soldering iron and pliers.
(Heat softens old glue and lessens wood chipping during removal)


Coiled Bulk Fretwire and Fretwire Bender clamped in vice.


Frets cut to size and ends of frets are "nipped" using special tool.
Nipped ends of frets allow frets to run over binding without passing through them.


Using Band Saw to cut new electronics cavity cover


Copper shielding glued into all electronics cavities to reduce extraneous electronic interference. Alternatively a metal particle paint can be used.
(extra contact cement ensures sticky copper back will adhere)


Checking Neck Angle of Copper Shielded Guitar Body


Assembled Guitar with Gold Hardware.


Potentiometers (Volume & Tone) & Selector Switch with Output Jack on underside of copper shielded control cavity cover.
(Cavity cover made four photos above)


Front of Control Cavity Cover with 'Pot' Shafts Protruding.


Assembled Guitar




Final Guitar as Presented to Owner.


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Wednesday, 1 October 2008

Acoustic Bass Guitar



Another Unfinished Project: An Acoustic Flat Top Bass Guitar based on a Martin Design. Guitar is assembled but requires fingerboard, saddle and finishing and hardware. So close yet so far away.

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Manual Bending of Guitar Sides on Bending Iron
(A Side Bending Jig was actually used)


Various Wooden Components of Acoustic Bass Guitar in preparation


Partially Assembled Parts:
Front Spruce Top Joined and Thicknessed with Soundhole cutout;


Joined Spruce Top Plate with Soundhole Cutout

(Soundhole cut with special cutting tool attachment on Dremel Tool)


Bracing Ribs Glued & Clamped To Spruce Top


Braces Trimmed with Chisels and Small Planes


Guitar Sides Glued and Clamped (Joined) at End Block


Sides at front Joined by Glue and Clamping to Neck Block


Excess Side Wood Chiseled away to reveal Neck Block V-Pocket
(Alternatively Dremel Tool could be used)


Side "Kerfed" Linings glued and clamped (high-tech clothes pins) to sides
(Linings provide strength and surface where to glue front and back plates.


Truing Surface of Linings with Small Plane


Truing Sides of back with Jointer


Glued Back being double checked for Thickness with Caliper Guage


Back Braces Glued and Clamped to Back


Routing Channel in Back for Decorative Inlay Strip
(Strip covers glue joint strengthening it)


Assembled Back& Sides


Spruce Top Placed on top of Assembled Back & Sides


Assembled Body with Neck in Foreground


Assembled Body (with some violin making tools on right)


Assembled Body showing Decorative Inlay Strip in Back


Binding Material (Coiled) with Dremel tool and Binding Channel Attachement


V-Joint Neck Attachment


Dremel Router Readied to cut Inlay Logo Pocket


ThunderHouse (THI) Logo Inlay Pocket Ready for Abalone Inlay


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This instrument remains uncompleted until I can once again get back to my shop.


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