New build - lap steel
Posted: Mon Apr 20, 2015 10:18 am
Here's a lap steel I just finished stringing up last night. American Elm body, Black Walnut fingerboard and pick guard, finished with Tru-Oil. The bridge and nut are 1/2 aluminum angle stock. The rest of the hardware and the electronics came from an online vendor - "economy" stuff, but it's doing the job.
I teach high school English. In 2013, we were asked to come up with creative rewards for students - I offered an afternoon session making a cookie-tin banjo. The student who chose this asked if we could up the ante a little. After some consideration, we settled on lap steel as a project doable in a couple of weekend sessions. Nearly two years later, this one is done!
The project grew in the making. At first, we figured we'd make a bone-head simple one out of 2x6 construction lumber. But the shop class had taken down a dying elm, and we were given a plank of that to make two guitars. Wood grown on the school grounds, milled and seasoned on site - couldn't pass it up for this project. Then I happened across some walnut scraps that were just right for the trim. And then, and then...
If I'd known how far this would progress, I would have done many things differently. Design problems and small blemishes and that seemed fine for a slapped together weekend project are pretty apparent on the finished instrument. Still, I'm proud of this. I've built a few other "real" instruments in the past ten years with the help of a good (sadly, deceased) friend, and a few cookie tin banjos and such. This is the nicest build I've done completely independently.
I don't post here often, but I read almost daily. Thank you for the support you all didn't even know you were giving me!
I teach high school English. In 2013, we were asked to come up with creative rewards for students - I offered an afternoon session making a cookie-tin banjo. The student who chose this asked if we could up the ante a little. After some consideration, we settled on lap steel as a project doable in a couple of weekend sessions. Nearly two years later, this one is done!
The project grew in the making. At first, we figured we'd make a bone-head simple one out of 2x6 construction lumber. But the shop class had taken down a dying elm, and we were given a plank of that to make two guitars. Wood grown on the school grounds, milled and seasoned on site - couldn't pass it up for this project. Then I happened across some walnut scraps that were just right for the trim. And then, and then...
If I'd known how far this would progress, I would have done many things differently. Design problems and small blemishes and that seemed fine for a slapped together weekend project are pretty apparent on the finished instrument. Still, I'm proud of this. I've built a few other "real" instruments in the past ten years with the help of a good (sadly, deceased) friend, and a few cookie tin banjos and such. This is the nicest build I've done completely independently.
I don't post here often, but I read almost daily. Thank you for the support you all didn't even know you were giving me!