Tape slicer for masking fretboards
- Peter Wilcox
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- Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 1:31 am
- Location: Northeastern California
Tape slicer for masking fretboards
Time to level and dress some frets. I hate masking the fretboard, the worst part being cutting the tape narrow enough for the upper frets. I cut it with scissors, and it always sticks to the scissors and tears. I'm too cheap to buy narrow masking tape, and I once tried sawing a roll in half with the band saw - that sure didn't work out. So I just made this jig with some offcuts from a neck glue up, a few drywall screws, a lid from cinnamon roll frosting, and a #11 blade. Gotta watch that blade - I can turn it upside down when not in use.
Maybe I can't fix it, but I can fix it so no one can fix it
- Karl Wicklund
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Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
That’s exactly the kind of thing I’d see in my old friend Frank’s shop. Quick, clean, cool!
Kaptain Karl
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Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
Nice idea! Did you cut the teeth in the lid or is it made that way?
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- Bryan Bear
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- Location: St. Louis, MO
Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
I like that a lot. The edge on the blade doesn't gum up?
PMoMC
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
- Peter Wilcox
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- Location: Northeastern California
Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
It's a round aluminum lid I cut in half with the band saw, bent it around the edges, drilled a couple of holes and just filed some notches in it. I was going to use a piece of hack saw blade, but this seemed easier to work with and it works OK.Clay Schaeffer wrote:Nice idea! Did you cut the teeth in the lid or is it made that way?
I've only done one neck with it, and no problem so far. If it gets gum on it I'd imagine it would come off with some naphtha or similar. Worst case I could just take another blade out of the $10 hundred pack.Bryan Bear wrote:I like that a lot. The edge on the blade doesn't gum up?
Maybe I can't fix it, but I can fix it so no one can fix it
- Bryan Bear
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- Location: St. Louis, MO
Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
Good point (pardon the pun). I was thinking you could make the slot to allow a standard (box cutter type) razor blade to fit face down with a cover of some sort on top. Even better would be a hinged lid of some sort that you cold close down and pierce the tape (near the roll) after you loaded it. I just know I would reach over for tape out of the corner of my eye and cut myself.
PMoMC
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
Take care of your feet and your feet will take care of you.
- Peter Wilcox
- Posts: 1319
- Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 1:31 am
- Location: Northeastern California
Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
Yes Bryan, it definitely poses a safety issue, so I guess I won't be manufacturing these. I couldn't think of a simple way to shield the blade and still make it easy to use. But on the bright side, I only cut my finger once while I was making it.
Maybe I can't fix it, but I can fix it so no one can fix it
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Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
I typically just put full width tape on the fretboard and use an x-acto to cut it at the next fret. It has worked well for me.
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Re: Tape slicer for masking fretboards
I'm still debating whether it might make sense have masks laser-ed in sheets of low tack mask. Too many scale lengths methinks.