I need to find plans for a bass guitar. From research it looks as if I can use the dimensions of a standard CBG with EADG strings for a bass. Please help me someone !!!
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If you want to use actual bass strings you need to go with a longer scale than regular CBG which is usually 24 - 25 inches. Bass scale is usually 28 - 34 inches. If you go fretless it simplifies things. For fretted you'd determine which scale you want and use a fret calculator to give measurements. Good luck. Here's one I made a while back on a 32" scale.
hey would you happen to have the dimension for yours available , we need soem good plans, yes fretless will be simpler. I want to do about 30in scale with nut to bridge being solid piece of wood, carribean cherry. and place magnetic pick ups, i think an adjustable bridge w ould be cool too.
Jim Morris > Ro'Nique StaleyMarch 22, 2017 at 6:35pm
The length of the neck will always depend on the size of the box and where you plan to put the bridge. I always start with the box first, then determine where do I want the bridge. That tells me about how long the neck needs to be. So from the bridge to the nut, in your case would be 30". Add another 5 -6" for the head and there you have it. The cool thing and also frustrating thing about these homemade instruments is that each one will have different measurements depending on the box size and scale length you're working with. The box I used in this build was quite a bit longer than most cigar boxes so it's a thing you have to lay out for each build. I hope this helps!
Jim, looks great! Looks like a 3-layer laminated neck? What species did you use, and did you include a truss rod? Any problems with the neck bowing under tension? I assume the bridge is attached to the through neck?
Thanks Jim. You're correct, 3 piece neck 2 outer pieces are padauk and the center is walnut. I pay close attention to grain direction to avoid bowing. The grain lines should be very close to vertical as you look at the end of the neck.No truss rod. and 2 years later absolutely no signs of bowing. Yes, the bridge is screwed into the thru neck.
Here's a link to this bass in action and some of the details are a bit clearer in the vid.
I'll be following this with interest as I'd like to build something similar. My own plan is for a short scale bass but I don't know enough about string travel OR (more importantly) the effect of stress on the (through) neck. I will likely laminate a neck rather than using a solid piece of wood, with the outer layers being hard maple, in the hope that this will contribute to stability without the need for a truss rod.
Replies
Some interesting info here.
https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/long-short-scale-bass-differences...
Thanks for that link Gus. I learned a couple of things!
If you want to use actual bass strings you need to go with a longer scale than regular CBG which is usually 24 - 25 inches. Bass scale is usually 28 - 34 inches. If you go fretless it simplifies things. For fretted you'd determine which scale you want and use a fret calculator to give measurements. Good luck. Here's one I made a while back on a 32" scale.
yours really look amazing though
Thanks!
hey would you happen to have the dimension for yours available , we need soem good plans, yes fretless will be simpler. I want to do about 30in scale with nut to bridge being solid piece of wood, carribean cherry. and place magnetic pick ups, i think an adjustable bridge w ould be cool too.
The length of the neck will always depend on the size of the box and where you plan to put the bridge. I always start with the box first, then determine where do I want the bridge. That tells me about how long the neck needs to be. So from the bridge to the nut, in your case would be 30". Add another 5 -6" for the head and there you have it. The cool thing and also frustrating thing about these homemade instruments is that each one will have different measurements depending on the box size and scale length you're working with. The box I used in this build was quite a bit longer than most cigar boxes so it's a thing you have to lay out for each build. I hope this helps!
Jim, looks great! Looks like a 3-layer laminated neck? What species did you use, and did you include a truss rod? Any problems with the neck bowing under tension? I assume the bridge is attached to the through neck?
Thanks Jim. You're correct, 3 piece neck 2 outer pieces are padauk and the center is walnut. I pay close attention to grain direction to avoid bowing. The grain lines should be very close to vertical as you look at the end of the neck.No truss rod. and 2 years later absolutely no signs of bowing. Yes, the bridge is screwed into the thru neck.
Here's a link to this bass in action and some of the details are a bit clearer in the vid.
https://youtu.be/IU8eBKmjMak
I'll be following this with interest as I'd like to build something similar. My own plan is for a short scale bass but I don't know enough about string travel OR (more importantly) the effect of stress on the (through) neck. I will likely laminate a neck rather than using a solid piece of wood, with the outer layers being hard maple, in the hope that this will contribute to stability without the need for a truss rod.