Years' End, Scroll Shop Update:
Well, another year is gone, and I have done very little in here. My 'Day Job' is such that I reached the last pay period this year with 86 hours of paid leave that could not be carried over into next year. According to the Payroll Pixie, I am a habitual offender of this policy... so I'm burning up as much time as possible this week and once again they are putting the overage into a bank of extended illness leave, which I will ultimately be using for another fusion surgery. So the leave time doesn't get "lost", just re-appropriated. The main focus of my work is turning from daily operations to the role of trainer these days, and that's how I hope to spend the balance of my time... (a little less than two years now) teaching the next generation of Water Plant Operators. Planned obsolescence.
Projects...
Fret Mill Music sends me upright basses for setup and usually just minor repair with some regularity. I have one in right now with a wonky fingerboard and a neck split to fix. I'll probably oil-treat the playing surface when I'm done.
Honeytone Banjos #27 and #28... both are awaiting final reassembly. I had tragedy strike on the neck of #28, and it was one of those things where I had to just disconnect from it for a while and then re-evaluate. I was so discouraged... but... it's only wood and time. I can fix it, but it just has not been a priority. (*the whole episode is documented beginning on page 18 here... makes me sad just looking back!) Anyway, the customer it's for is currently playing my ca. 1890 John Farris, and he ain't in no hurry to hand it off. The other one, #27 was a repair, that turned into a trade-in. Not sure what Dad wants to do with it. I finished the repair they asked for, but the re-assemble and setup work remains. All he said was, "let's hold off on it a while, they weren't going to like it, so I traded them another banjo..." Okay... I did a super-clean repair, and as far as I know, nobody has seen it but me... the whole thing was weird, but whatever.
My Martin 12-string D-20 conversion is full-steam ahead. Everybody who has played that guitar is blown away with the sound. So there are a couple decisions to be made about what degree to take the job to, but I definitely want to follow through. Right this five minutes, I am less bothered by the elongated 12-string headstock than I was, and have somewhat grown used to the chunkier neck. I could very easily decide to simply reset the original neck, and leave six tuning machines on it, which confines the scope of work to replacing the bridge and plugging/shimming/redrilling the bridgeplate. That's a relatively easy job. But the jury is still out. My buddy Ward hasn't weighed-in yet, and his opinion will carry the most influence. Maybe we'll still make a whole new neck, maybe not necessary!
I've got a couple cellos in here that need setting up... meh, nothing special. I had a wild notion of making one of them into a travel-sized bass. Then I realized it would be more of a conversation piece than a bass, and not that much of a conversation.
And some old friends just gave me a whole stack of wood from a closed down shop... walnut billets, several boards of mahogany, and more of cherry, a couple marked as ash. Theres some smaller boards of curly and some birdseye maple too. I just had time to sort and stack it yesterday.
I got enough Lowe's giftcards to buy a new ShopVac... mine finally died this year, so it's super-dusty in here. The Shop-Vac, doubled as my dust collection system on the belt sander... oh, well.
Maybe I will have more to post about this year. I sure hope to anyway.