I hate doing fretwork. I like it better these days, now that I get paid better to do it... but I still don't enjoy it. Ward laughs at me. Man, you're gonna' wish for days you could sit on your ass and level up frets... Yeah, probably so. His fretwork is beautiful. Probably why I got him to do both of my Series basses. Anyway, I'm stalling a fret job. But it ain't like I'm just up here wasting time...
I just finished gluing the top back on a fractional-sized carved-top Framus bass, that wasn't the easiest repair job. The solid spruce top had split open from the tailblock up, on a diagonal, until it finally reached the centerseam, where it continued. And it had been open for quite a while, under tension, so it did not want to line back up for a nice, clean glue joint. I thought I'd probably have to do a spline repair, but really couldn't tell until I got the thing apart to more easily manipulate the pieces. Getting it apart wasn't too bad. I was worried, because it had been apart and open at least once before as evidenced by the "repaired by" note from June, 1969. Thank you Mr. A.B. Seaboldt, for leaving the hide glue door unlocked, and not epoxied shut. I have honored your work, and left my name under yours, these 55 years later.
What you're seeing here in the pictures, is a creative way to draw the longways cracks together, and bind them front to back. After they were closed and solid, the seam and cracks were reinforced with spruce cleats. Note the grain of the quartersawn spruce is turned the opposite direction of the grain of the top. Once glued in place, these cleats help bind the two (or three) pieces of the top together.
Of course, gluing the top back on... same routine as usual... lots of clamps. Used hide glue. So 55 years from now, someone can put their "repaired by" next to me and Mr. A.B. Seaboldt of Pontiac, Michigan here.
I gotta' get back to dressin' on them frets...