Members WRGKMC Posted April 22, 2014 Members Share Posted April 22, 2014 Came across these botched bodies someone thought they could route and refinish. The white one is a mess. Its likely a start copy, plywood body someone hacked up whit a chisel trying to fit humbuckers in there, then tried to paint it with rattle cans of enamel paint. Ugh The Red one is another botch job. Have no idea how they attempted to route it but the area where a bridge gets mounted is nothing but tooth picks left with all the screw holes and probably wont remain in tune after using a whammy bar. The third one looks like someone attempted to sand through a poly finish and gave up, likely swearing these ass off. Poly is as hard as glass and the only way you can get it off is with a heat gun or burning out a sander. He should have left it alone because the back side of the body looked great with a nice red finish. All of them are being sold for $1 and no bidders. If they had been left intact they would likely pull in $100 or more. As is, they invested all kinds of time and effort and possibly $50 in paint and sand paper and made them completely worthless. I've bought allot of botched bodies that can be revived from the graveyard and build a FrankenGuit but some of them are quite beyond hope. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members cx04332 Posted April 24, 2014 Members Share Posted April 24, 2014 For the red one, try drilling the screw holes out to slightly smaller than a hardwood dowel diameter. Dowel should be a tight interference fit; ie tap in with hammer. Slather both hole and dowel peg with fibered epoxy. Do one hole at a time and clean up. Epoxy is tough to clean up when it is dry. Wait a 7 to 10 days before drilling new holes. I did a strat body with multiple bridge mount holes and it now holds 14-58 with no problems Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members WRGKMC Posted April 24, 2014 Author Members Share Posted April 24, 2014 I usually use epoxy putty for that kind of stuff when I can. Having a flat surface under the whammy so it returns to pitch is an important item. Of course if its a Floyd type with dual pins it wouldn't matter much becauseit isn't sitting on the body. Any filling would simply be cosmetic. I had one guitar body where a guy tried to make a Strat body it into a bass guitar and cut a pickup hole between the bridge and Tail. I first tried to fill that hole in with Plastic wood. It began to shrink after I had painted the body.I also tried a piece of wood glued in and since the wood type was different it would shrink differently than the rest of the body and developed cracks. Last thing I used was epoxy putty. Worked like a champ. It does take lacquer nicely and its been about 7 years with noshrinkage so far. Allot easier than trying to get a wood block to fit too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members GilmourD Posted April 25, 2014 Members Share Posted April 25, 2014 I was eyeballing that red body... But the Floyd post holes look too borked... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members WRGKMC Posted April 25, 2014 Author Members Share Posted April 25, 2014 The third one would be the best choice to work with since it only needs to have new polly applied. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members guitarcapo Posted April 25, 2014 Members Share Posted April 25, 2014 I'd just buy THIS and strip it: http://www.ebay.com/itm/SX-LEO-3TS-Electric-Guitar-with-1-Piece-American-Swamp-Ash-Body-1-Piece-Neck-/371050690751 Sell the neck, loaded pick guard and hardware on Ebay....I bet you'd recoup $80 or so easy. Then you'd have a perfect one piece swamp ash body totally unmolested and perfectly finished. With less work and probably the same cash outlay counting finishing and repair costs. Sometimes a dollar is too expensive...especially when you add shipping costs. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members WRGKMC Posted April 25, 2014 Author Members Share Posted April 25, 2014 Why strip it, it looks great as it is. If anything play the hell out of it and when the frets wear, just get a Fender neck for it instead of replacing them in the stock neck. Then you can sell the stock neck to recoup the cost of the Fender neck. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Steve2112 Posted April 26, 2014 Members Share Posted April 26, 2014 Why strip it' date=' it looks great as it is. If anything play the hell out of it and when the frets wear, just get a Fender neck for it instead of replacing them in the stock neck. Then you can sell the stock neck to recoup the cost of the Fender neck.[/quote'] Sounds like a bit of work...like stock market or real estate type work. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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