Joy, then Sadness... and Frustration. You can experience them all within moments in the Scroll Shop.
The new hardware came in yesterday morning, so I hit the pause button rubbing coats of oil onto the neck of soon-to-be #22-28, and mounted the tuners. (joy) There is a purpose to this. It compresses the wood and finish a little bit when the nuts are cinched down on the bushings. If the finish were at full thickness, you
could generate a crack in it. Not as much with oil as lacquer, which is more brittle. Still, I wanted to see how they looked, more importantly, how they fit. Very pleased with both. The 5th string peg is a tapered bore, and I didn't seat all the way, just allowed the splines to cut their grooves. It will be exactly flush when we do final setup. I'll put a leather block backup behind the neck and drive it in with a fret hammer, with a little dab of glue to bind it in the natural event of wood expansion and contraction.
Then... well, then I decided to go ahead and thread the lag bolts into the heel of the neck. Should have been an easy job. It already had two old ones installed. Thought I could simply clamp a small pair of vise grips to the shank and back them out. The upper one went fine. The lower one, the one that really matters, wouldn't budge. I should've quit right there. I tighted up and cranked... and... [tink] it broke off flush. (sadness) I tried to carve out around it and get another grip. Broke again. (frustration) Because of the way we traditionally install the lower lag bolt on an angle then bend the end straight, I knew there was no use trying to drill it out.
I went out for a walk and thought about it. Came back a couple hours later with a solution. Remove the piece of wood with the broken bolt, take as little as possible, true it up, and add a piece of wood back on. Dowel it, conceal the dowels under the heelcap, even make it decorative if need be.
So that's where I start this morning. The ruined piece has been cut off, the neck heel is nice and true, ready for a new block to be added and sculpted. Won't be easy. I may end up with a total refinish. I still have plenty of the color.
Wood is forgiving. But man... I was so close.