Friday, 2 September 2016

1973 Guild Capri CE100D



Here's a 1973 Guild Capri husk I found after the vultures had stripped it clean of anything that had value. The top looked amazing and the guitar was structurally sound with no neck breaks. All it needed was some parts, and I could have a poor man's Gibson ES175 at a fraction of the cost.




The guitar has a super slim neck, "Fretless Wonder" frets, and a very shallow neck angle, so the rosewood base of the new tune-o-matic bridge required substantial sanding to get the action where it needed to be. 





























I taped sandpaper to the top of the guitar and sanded the bridge down by moving it back and forth to match the contour of the guitar. I used the same method to shape the pickup rings.



Rewiring and installing the electronics on a hollow body guitar is a tricky maneuver, and something that I was really looking forward to doing with this project. I started by completing the wiring harness on a template outside of the guitar.







Then all the parts need to be installed through the pickup openings on the top of the guitar. I used clear tubing to thread the output jack and pots into their respective holes.


Clear tubing is labeled and threaded into the control holes and out the lead pickup opening.




















Each tube is then attached to it's respective pot and output jack
Everything looks like a big mess at this point but you just need to pull on the tubes and it all comes together at once. The pots are then secured in place by threading the nuts over the tubing. Pickups are a stock set of Gibson Humbuckers (490R and 498T).
     Everything is put back into the guitar through the lead pickup opening & pulled into place.






















And here it is all finished.









Sunday, 7 August 2016

1891 C. Bruno & Son (New York) Style 1884


Wow, it's been four years since my last post? I really suck at blogging. However, I have been digging up a lot of old guitars and making them playable again. 
This guitar is a circa 1891 C. Bruno & Son (New York) Style 1884 Parlour Guitar with original hard shell case that sold for $24 new ($27.75 w/case). 
When it arrived it looked like the guitar had exploded from the inside.




















































































The Adirondack Cedar top was uncracked, but the one piece Brazilian Rosewood back and sides needed a lot of work to piece back together. The Honduran Mahogany neck with no truss rod was straight and the brass tuners with bone buttons were in working order. As well, the original ebony bridge and nut needed to be re installed. The only parts I needed were a set of end pins, a new bone saddle, a bottle of glue, and a ton of clamps.







































































































And here it is all glued back together. I only touched up the repaired areas and tried to keep as much of the original patina as possible.

                                                                                          


















Expensive and exotic wood/parts by today's standards but readily available in the C. Bruno & Son Musical Instrument Catalogue in 1889. 



This little guitar originally belonged to Mrs. J.W. Hummell of West Ashland, Wisconsin. Below is the tag on the case which was written on the back of her husband's Stag Party Invitation from September 1891.


The C. Bruno & Son Co. of New York was a musical instrument distributor and not a manufacturer, so I got to wondering who made such a quality instrument as there is no indication in the catalogue. Charles Bruno does however have a connection to the C.F. Martin Guitar Co. and was at one time their accountant. Check out the similarities between the C. Bruno Style 1884 and the Martin 2 1/2 Model 17 below. 

Martin
Bruno
Martin Logo
Bruno Logo

Martin Harp



Bruno Harp























































The maker may be a mystery but one thing is for sure, this little C. Bruno Parlour Guitar probably hadn't been played in decades, and now it's back together again making music and sounding incredible.


Saturday, 15 September 2012

1966 Fender Duo Sonic


Here's a 22.5 inch short scale 1966 Fender Duo Sonic I picked up a while back that looked like it had once belonged to Double Rainbow guy. It was crudely painted in a sort of psychedelic tie dye rainbow design with brushed on acrylic enamel, and had two Jazzmaster pickups stuffed into it's hacked up body and pickguard.






The first things it needed were pickups and a pickguard to give the guitar back it's correct looking proportions. I was able to get a set of MIJ Mustang pickups and vintage '66 Mother of Pearl pickguard quite reasonably and I was ready to begin. Believe it or not, the consensus was still out on whether to keep the finish as is or strip the whole thing.



Well it did look a hell of a lot better but that paint job still had to go. The guitar had also been painted black at some point and I could see that the original Olympic White was still underneath it all. So I thought I would try to get back down to the original finish with some wet sanding. However, when I got down to the black I decided to stop because I really liked the unintentional reliced look.






I also picked up a tan '56 Fender Musicmaster case that fits the guitar perfectly because of the short scale. I'm quite happy with the current over all look, but one day I may still get down to the original Olympic White. 

(UPDATE - August 2016) My daughter has now taken this one on permanent loan. She refuses to play barre chords and loves the 22.5 inch scale so it's a perfect fit. Her only request was that I switch the pickguard to tort.