Kevin Chilcott

Luthier

MAKING AN ANGEL

The Fingerboard - Cutting the Fret Slots

The 'Jigs'

In the pictures below is the Mk II Fret Slot Cutting Jig which was designed by Dave Sumner and Myself. Dave built it for me in early 1986
It can cut
24 3/4", 25 1/2" and 34" scale lengths. All my guitars from then on had their fret slots cut with this bit of equipment. 

My Mk I Jig I designed and made myself in 1981 and used it until 1986 when Mk II came along. 
It could only cut a
24 5/8" scale length at that time. 
I chose
24 5/8" as it was the easiest scale to 'physically mark out' and cut for a Jig with the limited equipment I had.  Also, with the figures and calculations involved, to get the maths right was quite a headache
This was essentially a
manual version of the Mk II - as the Jig used a Handsaw and was more crudely made. All my early guitar fingerboards were cut on that apart from 'Pearly' and the '12 string Acoustic'. Chris, my old Boss, let me use his Jig for those. 
I'll try and dig 'it' out so you can see the differences..... and I'll also try and show you how to make a similar simple fret-cutting jig in the 'Tools' section.

 

The Mk II Jig

Essentially, the First Component of the Mk II Fret Cutting Jig is a Circular Saw with a 6" (150mm) Blade, the cutting area being machined to 25 thousandth/inch (0.65mm) and a Trolley System that the Saw can traverse. The Fingerboard Blank is stuck with double sided tape to the Second Component which is an Aluminium Block with locating holes cut in the side at the exact spacing that the frets should be. This feeds through Teflon 'Runners' which keep it square to the Saw and Trolley. The Third Component is a Locking Bar and Locater. Of these components, the Trolley, The Locater and the Runners are securely bolted to a Strong and Flat Base board - in this case 1 1/2" thick.

 

MAKING AN ANGEL

DESIGNING AND BUILDING A GUITAR FROM SCRATCH


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