I bought this guitar for a relatively good deal about a year about. It played great , had a good neck angle and sounded nice for a giant ply archtop oh and it's beeeautiful!
Anyway it had an unsightly gap between the heel of the neck and the body. this was obviously scaring off most buyers so I got it a decent price. It seemed really solid, wasn't moving and had good action and bridge height, I reconfigured it with a pair of surface mount hilotrons. (I kept all the original gear and the conversion was very minimal (two tiny screw holes to mount the bridge hilotron) I also took measurements at the heel and kept an eye on the gap. I've played it for the last year at home and many many rehearsals, a couple of recording sessions and recently a couple of shows. Solid the whole time. Nice playing and sounding guitar. However it took a tumble in rehearsal recently..ooops! and I noticed the action had got .3 mmm higher at the 12th fret and the gap looked a little bigger. So i loosen off the strings and gave the neck a wiggle to see if it was moving, it did a little crackle and then easily wiggled in two directions. I did bit more gentle wiggling(of the guitar...) and then gave the heel a tap with a deadblow hammer (I used a cork sided ebony sanding block to protect the heel) A couple of taps and it slid right out, to reveal cardboard shims on both mating surfaces. No wood loss or finish problems. YAY I have a receipt from work done in 2012 which included a 'neck reset' I'm going to clean it up and start dry fitting it with hardwood shims, probably mahogany or maple. My goal is to get a nice solid reset with a good angle and a tight fit of the heel to the body, unlike previously. Pictures (in reverse order..oops) -As bought 1955 convertible -heel gap close up -converted to a 2 pickup guitar with custom made Brazillian rosewood synchro style bridge, pickguard, pickup surrounds and switch. - in pieces -close up of dovetail
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