Advice on cutting neck blanks, please
Posted: Sun Feb 26, 2017 3:01 pm
I grabbed a board of maple from my stack today to get started on making some neck blanks. After I cleaned it up, I ended up with three 1" plus by 4 1/2" by 27" quartersawn boards. I was frankly expecting them to be flatsawn, and I planned to laminate them to cut two blanks that would have turned the flatsawn on it's side to become quartersawn after the glue up (I've done this before). If I do that now, I'll end up with flatsawn oriented glue-ups. If that makes sense.
The other way I have made necks is what I refer to as the "classical" method - take the plank, add a kerf cut piece for the headstock, and stack the heel (I've done this before too, I added a stripe in the heel stack to add some interest). If I did that, I could get three necks out of this, all one piece perfectly quartersawn in the actual neck part. I guess another option is half way - make one quartersawn kerf-and-stack neck blank from one board, and laminate the other two with a center stripe of some contrasting wood of some sort, and get two out of that, but laminated flatsawn.
What would you do? Interweb seems completely divided on the relative merits of quartersawn vs flatsawn necks.
Brian
The other way I have made necks is what I refer to as the "classical" method - take the plank, add a kerf cut piece for the headstock, and stack the heel (I've done this before too, I added a stripe in the heel stack to add some interest). If I did that, I could get three necks out of this, all one piece perfectly quartersawn in the actual neck part. I guess another option is half way - make one quartersawn kerf-and-stack neck blank from one board, and laminate the other two with a center stripe of some contrasting wood of some sort, and get two out of that, but laminated flatsawn.
What would you do? Interweb seems completely divided on the relative merits of quartersawn vs flatsawn necks.
Brian