***CLICK***
flips lights on, looks around... Sorry guys, I haven't put much up here in a while... the King MorTone project had to be sidelined for a little while. It's been a pretty crazy Spring/Summer here in Ed's Scroll Shop, not all of it good, but a good bit of it welcome too. It's steady work though, and that's a good thing. I seem to be spending more time working on things other than basses though.
So anyway, if you look here, you can see this bass has had its neck cracked right through where a bolt had been run in from the back of the heel. (I got the bolt out already, and pitched it in the hardware bucket. Remind me to tell you all about The Bucket) There are two older repaired neck cracks above this one that are stable, so I won't mess with them, although I will be tidying up some of those fixes. It also suffers from a condition common to a lot of American Standard basses - the neck block itself is poorly fit to the ribs, and is loose. At the moment, this is actually working to my advantage. I'll secure it in place after the neck is in one piece again.
One thing I always liked about American Standard basses, the
H.N. White Co. extruded all of their own parts, including these magnificent geared tuning machines. I'll take these off and clean them up. These are actually worth more than the rest of this entire instrument is...
truth. (in its current state... we're going to change that status)
*bonus link: here is some more information about the H.N. White Co.
http://www.hnwhite.com/hnwhitepage.htm I've spent a lot of time thinking about how to fix this one, and finally got a good start on this old bass... y'all hang on now... it's about to get sticky... now, where is that BIG span clamp at?!
More later.