Bob Garrish wrote:
Sheldon Dingwall wrote:
Bob, I never thought about a third vise in the center. That would be cool. What would you think about a Y shaped piece with two pins that come in at 45 degrees or so to support the middle in both the Z and Y directions?
Vibration works both ways, so you'd need to support it 'top and bottom' to stop Z-axis vibration. The fact that you're using a button cutter means you're going to have a pretty low-vibration cut, so perhaps just wedging a piece of foam rubber or something under the middle of the neck would be enough to take care of it. Since you've got a truss rod in there at carving time, you can always flatten the middle again if the rubber pushes it up, right?
I have a similar idea for supporting the center on a universal neck jig. so far...I've made new jigs for every neck model and I can't keep doing that.
My idea for a universal fixture:
1. Affixes and supports the heel at a hard angle with screws.
2. Supports the headstock with a plane that will lock to the position the headstock takes after cutting.
3. An adjustable center support with a fairly hard foam pad as you describe.
The screwed down heel is obviously the hard point (and a "boss" of sorts) since that is going to fit to the body. Any subtle misalignment of the rear headstock, due to the stress relief of the rear cut must be accommodated for with a locking plane. Variable height must also be accounted for. I have several ideas on this but they are in the thinking stage...not really gelled yet but it could be something as simple a three point locking post assembly. Honestly though? I screw the headstock to an angled plate now and haven't noticed any real problem with this method using shims to accommodate subtle issues.
The center support is key I think. I worry about z-axis vibration too so I'd make this and then maybe find out later that it wasn't necessary. Once the neck and headstock are affixed to the jig a height gauge would be placed over the top of the wood in the center. Then the center support would be adjusted upward until it deflected the needle above. Then adjusted down again until the needle returned to his initial position. One might have to mess with various hardness on the pad until the support was ideal.