This instrument was commissioned by multi-instrumentalist Alan Bond.

He chose:

Standard features include:

The rims are bent and joined to the endblocks. The curly maple inlays are installed. The side braces and linings are in place.

Here is the back being assembled. It's being braced to about a 15-foot spherical radius. This allows the back to be more rigid and stronger for its weight, and it looks cool. The top is flat - there's so little wood on the top that arching it wouldn't add any significant strength.

Here the rims are being clamped to the back. The workboard under the back is dished to match the 15 foot radius spherical arching. The sack on top is a 25 lb sack of shot. The guy at the gun shop wondered why I didn't know one type of shot from another. I only cared how much the sack weighed!

 

3 necks

Here are the three neck blanks I'm going to be working on again soon. I'll work on them sequentially. Pretty obvious which is which. Each person wanted a very different version of the neck, so I need to treat them separately in order not to confuse myself.

3 fingerboards

And here are the fingerboards. Left, Nokleberg (white MoP dots); middle, Hansen (abalone dots); right, Bond white MoP squares). There are three inlays missing from David Hansen's fingerboard. I must place an order for them right away! Hah! I thought I had enough. The chalk scores on Alan Bond's fingerboard are to remind me where to drill. Since the inlays are square, I will have to figure out what size drill to use, then chisel away the points of the squares.

The back is assembled to the rims, the binding ledges cut, and the binding installed. The next step will be to cut and drill the neck attachement mortise. The neck blank has its graphite truss rod installed and the neck attachment hardware and will soon have the tenon cut and the shape profiles cut. The fingerboard inlays are in and the binding is done. Next stpe is to install frets.