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Been digging around I can't find a good breakdown on how to actually build a CF neck. And I don't mean skinning a wooden neck with CF. I own one Moses neck but I really don't want to saw it in half to find out
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That is one way, but the more common approach is to route a couple of slots in the neck on either side of the truss rod and glue in store-bought rectangular epoxy-carbon bars. They don't need to be very big to stiffen up the neck. I like to use bars that are .090" thick and 1/4" high. Those are definitely on the small side but they add some strength to the neck without making it too stiff to adjust with the truss rod.Marko Ursin wrote:You make a neck out of wood first, then you take a mold of it, then you make the cf neck inside the mold. If you don't want it to be hollow, you fill it with anything you like.
I'd say again that this is the only way to make a cf neck if you do not want to skin anything with cf. I have no clue about the material thicknesses or anything. Trial may be the best way to find out.Marko Ursin wrote:You make a neck out of wood first, then you take a mold of it, then you make the cf neck inside the mold. If you don't want it to be hollow, you fill it with anything you like.
Do you have any particular place to purchase these bars?Barry Daniels wrote:That is one way, but the more common approach is to route a couple of slots in the neck on either side of the truss rod and glue in store-bought rectangular epoxy-carbon bars. They don't need to be very big to stiffen up the neck. I like to use bars that are .090" thick and 1/4" high. Those are definitely on the small side but they add some strength to the neck without making it too stiff to adjust with the truss rod.Marko Ursin wrote:You make a neck out of wood first, then you take a mold of it, then you make the cf neck inside the mold. If you don't want it to be hollow, you fill it with anything you like.
Another approach that I have used (like in the previously mentioned MIMF bass) was to rout slots and then place loose carbon tow (bundle of parallel carbon fibers) that are saturated in wet epoxy into the slots and cast them in place. This is not a common approach but I don't think I was the first to use it. It also does not provide as much strength as the store-bought bars, so I would not recommend it for a first guitar.