So I know lots of people use bone for nuts and bridges. but I was wondering if a chicken bone (or a chunk of one) would be strong enough to use as a bridge. I think if I filed down the joint ends of it so it laid flat, it'd be pretty neat to straight up just use a bone for the bridge.

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  • I have not made my CBG yet but I have been making custom knives for years. When I want to use a softer material for the handle I stabilize it. You can do this in a vacuum chamber of your own design. Stick your bone in a small jar, fill it with Thompson's water seal, or another similar agent, draw a vacuum on it and that will pull the sealant into the done. Let it dry for a week and it will be denser and harder. Just a thought???

  • Where I live in Colorado they sell antler bits as dog chews in the pet shops... they do look good. Worth a try. 

     

    • try and get the part of the antler where it connects to the skull cap, you want it to be dense thats why bone works so good. It transmits the sound from the neck...the denser the material the better the sound. Where a metal bolt robs the sound...thats just my 2 cents worth...lol.

  • This is just nuts!

    • Sometimes, you gotta saddle up, and take the bridge to a better life.

  • 305818903?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024Cow bones...remember...the Tone is in the Bone ! and for the smell of milling cow bones into my custom slides...yeah it smells like $$$$$$ to me...lol.

  • This has been a great forum topic for me.  Someone sent some info that bleach tends to make the bones brittle.  They said that the pros use a diluted peroxide mixture.  I boil, soak in H2O2, and sun dry.  Kills the smell and bacteria.  I first tried this process on chicken bones, then found out they were hollow. Oh well.

    • Jim I'm glad you bumped this old thread as I've been wondering about bones. I buy bags of soup bones from an Asian market, couple dollars gets me about 5lbs worth. My dog loves the marrow but some of the bones are too hard even for her so now I have a use for them. Thanks for the tip about killing the smell.

      Also, for anyone still wanting to try bird bones, turkey leg bones are very dense and strong and should be plenty tough enough as a guitar bridge. Wing bones are also pretty tough and might make for a good nut.

  • I guess you could fill them with a mixture of epoxy and sawdust or something, no?
  • I've been wondering the same thing. I have access to a large supply of pigeon bones at work, and I always thought they would look cool, but I never grabbed any because I figured (rightly) that they wouldn't be strong enough. A strengthening filler would be nice.

    Jason W. said:
    I wonder if theres something you could fill it with to help keep it's structure. Although, that might be defeating the purpose.
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