Steve Saville wrote:
TonyKarol wrote:
Yeah ... um .. not sure exactly how you do that without dismantling the guitar ... nasty.
Since it should have been tucked under the kerfed lining and side, I'm thinking a block bonded to the side and butted against the transverse brace should do the trick. It wouldn't be pretty, but it should hold.
One way to find out!
I don't think your solution will help a whole lot Steve .As I see it , you have two problems. The first being you didn't tuck the brace into the linings . Adding a block bonded to the side to support it may help , but the biggest problem is the fact that the Transverse brace doesn't SPAN the upper bout . It stops at the headblock , then you have another little piece glued in on the cutaway side. As a repairman, I've seen a lot of deep cutaways use this design . Generally, they all tend to cave in.
If you were determined to have such a deep cutaway , a better method would have been to slant the transverse brace on an angle, so that it SPANS the complete upper bouts. I would suggest you do this.
Only last week I had a friend over with his Takamine cutaway . He hasn't had it all that long and was complaining of a high action . Exactly the same deal . Deep cutaway with the transverse finishing halfway at the headblock. Result : caved in
I'm hoping this doesn't sound too blunt Steve , but if you try and take shortcuts ,you can expect the results. Good luck with the repair