The bridge is left clamped overnight and then any remaining glue on the bridge is cleaned up. The bridge-plate caul is clamped back on and the remaining bridge pin holes drilled through the top and bridge-plate using a 4mm brad point drill. Then the bridge pin holes are reamed so that the ebony pins fit.
The saddle blanks are fitted and then the next job is to slot the bridge so that the string is locked in place by the unslotted bridge-pins. I use a small jig saw blade and needle files to do this.
The tuners are fitted onto the neck and hollow arm and a bone nut fitted:
Setting up involves fitting main neck strings and cutting the initial nut slots, bringing the strings to pitch, capoing at the first fret and adjusting the truss rod to give the correct neck relief, adjusting the saddle height for desired action at the 12th fret and finally cutting the nut slots to give desired clearance at the nut. Then the sub-bass strings are fitted and the saddle shaped to give a uniform distance from the strings to the top. Here’s the result.
Then today I did some recording – I always like to do this in the first few days after stringing an instrument up as it gives me a benchmark to measure sound changes against later. This is a very new instrument to me and I need time to get to grips with playing it and learning how best to record it so regard this first recording as a “sketch”. I have a medley of two pieces in mind that I want to eventually arrange and play properly “The Snows they Melt the Soonest/Vatersay Bay”. The second tune is a piping tune that Mark Thomson kindly suggested when I asked him for piping tunes in the “McCrimmons’ Lament” idiom. I have the “road map” of an arrangement worked out but the tune is complex in its variations and I need more time for this. The first tune has been recorded in lovely versions by Ann Briggs, Karen Casey and Eliza Carthy and was recently massacred by that other big girl Sting.The tuning is (from lowest sub-bass up):
Db F Ab Eb Bb F Bb Eb Ab Bb
If the main guitar neck was capoed at the 4th fret this would be DADGCD. String gauges are 70,70,70,47,70,42,32,24,20w,17. So here’s my “sketch” of “The Snows they melt the Soonest” recorded using an AKGC1000S microphone with flat EQ and no added effects.
The Snows They Malt the Soonest"
Well did “Fangorn” do what I hoped it would when I set out on this journey? For the first half an hour I wasn’t sure but then he woke up and rumbled. Does the low string on the main neck work better acoustically with the hollow arm – yes. Does it work even better with the sympathetic sub-bass string – yes. Acoustically it rumbles and rocks but as I say I need to experiment with the best way to capture this on a recording. I plan to do three recordings of the same thing – one with the sub-bass strings off and the hollow arm “muffled” (to simulate my normal baritone “Treebeard”) then with the hollow arm “unmuffled” and finally with the sub-bass strings on.
When I’m happy with the feel of the neck I’ll put the Tru-oil finish on it and put a label in and make some Madagascan Rosewood tuner buttons.