What an interesting line of work. I wanted also to pay you a compliment on your son. You did it right! He is a wonderful young man! The kind of man God sends to do HIS work. Hugs for such a wonderful son! (I love your daughter in law's laugh...she is so stinkin' cute!) (They should have more children lol)
Ok... Since there are several comments regarding CDs, I will ONETIMEONLY take email orders MONDAY morning only. Send me an email with your name address, etc. I will then send you a PayPal invoice that you can pay with PayPal or a different credit card. I have 2 CDs still available. One is called Heavenly Music. It is all Gospel Bluegrass with one or 2 original tunes. The other is called Its In The Wind. This one is all original tunes and includes both Gospel and regular Bluegrass Each CD is $12 plus $4 shipping I will sell both for $22 and $5 shipping. Probably won't do this again.
"Altro" is not a word in English. I think you mean "outro", which is the opposite of intro, although in this case perhaps "extro" might be more appropriate.
Brings back some good old times watching you do this repair. Turned out great as usual. I have learned so much from you Jerry. I do repairs with confidence now days. Thanks for the video
? It's good to have you back in your Guitar shop Jerry. Great video. You covered a guitar setup in a way that any novice could follow your steps. The repair work and the new frets were just a bonus. Thanks. Watching your videos gave me the courage to work on my own guitars and I was well past 75 years old when you got me started. Now I am 82 years young. Added a question mark just so you would read this. LOL
Mr. Randy Schartiger - I cannot tell you how great it is to have gems like you and Jerry providing your videos. I had a small crack in the back of my guitar that may have only been in the finish, but I used CA glue and a razor blade with scotch tape and I am very happy with the results. Thank you. And Mr. Rosa, you are so talented as well.
Nella, you are basically correct. The 1st shop was where the AirBNB is now. Then moved into where my office is now. Then moved out into the shop at the present location when I hired Melissa and Caleb.
Jerry thank you so whole heartedly for the insize tool, I use it every day still and greatly appreciate it and appreciate you dear friend! so good to see you working again! I'm almost in the same problem you are dealing with my hands! I charge $50+ to make a nut or saddle BECAUSE it takes so long! one customer thought I machined his new saddle it was intonated so well, I said nope I filed it every bit by hand and don't even have machines to do it with lol I guess he was happy :) keep on rocking it brother! you are my hero and wish you all the very best!!! God bless you sir!
Yes, interesting video. To protect the upper surface of the top soundboard from scratching it with a file, when the edges of the frets are processed with a file approximately 156 millimeters long, you need to stick two pieces of masking tape on top of each other (as the luthier did in this blog, they were blue), you need to put two leaves from cardboard of millimeter thickness approximately, and glue it to the top with masking tape. This will be more reliable to protect the varnished top from a file.The possibility of him jumping off to no purpose.
An awesome great video and a super great job on the guitar. Bill is lucky to have a friend like you. I truly enjoyed the video and the repair. I do miss watching you work on the music instruments. Thank you for sharing this. Stay well and safe Gerry.
More than Jerry, thank you Bill for bringing in your guitar and having Jerry work on it. What a pleasure it was seeing the master at work again...and yes, I did learn a thing or two. Stay well, Jerry!
I keep a can of compressed air around to use to force the glue down into the crack. It saves a little time in waiting for the glue run down into the crack.
Appreciate you still putting these up after your well deserved retirement! I always learn new things, even if I only dare work on my own cheap solid body electric guitars!
Good comment for a good repair video! Especially the chunk missing from the back; well done! As good as it gets! Only thing missing was something like a brief rant on hide glue... 😊
Always the master! It’s truly enjoyable to see your instrument repairs; better than any TV! I’m happy you showed us this repair. Thanks as always from Gilbert, AZ.
1K+ upward thumb, and 13,366th fan view. Nice to see you tinkering with instruments again; hope your hands don't hurt too much when you're done. Cheers.
Fully understand you retiring, but great to see you working your magic again, perhaps you could do one repair every month? Sure hope you consider it, would make a lot of people happy.
Jerry I have a epiphone acoustic guitar from the 1970 s and the neck looks more like a electric guitar and I was told it would break and it finally did, I was wondering if it can be fixed, l guess it was a common problem? Thanks
Jerry love when your doing the guitar repairs. Have missed it so much.. bee in 🇮🇪. When are the rosa string words coming to Ireland to play some gigs.❤
I wonder if that really nice looking volute on the back of the headstock did anything to protect the neck from further damage, or the headstock breaking completely like how some Gibsons do when they are dropped.
Nice work, great tips, have you considered 3d printing the nuts? The plastic isnt as hard as tusq, but i have to say its not as bad as i thought after 3d printing a replacement for my Yamaha. It didnt loose its characteristic jangle sound although i did notice less attack right away. The PLA plastic i was printing with was definately more softer then the stock plastic that came with the guitar but surprsingly didnt change the tone, and after awhile i got used to it and didnt even notice the difference. They do have exoitic carbon fibre glass infused 3d printing filaments that could get close to tusq or surpass it i bet. I personaly dont have the kind of 3d printer to do those exotic filaments otherwise id experiment more. Learning CAD to do the nut was hard enough, although probably the simplest shape to learn the basics of pading and pocketing. The whole shape is just a triangel from the side view, "padded" in another dimension gives you the nut width. The string slots are rectangular pockets, and thats the basics of CAD - pads and pockets to make all these weird shapes. Its not as easy as i thought and the softare is really janky to use (freecad) but once you get your shape and dial it in you can print them off, like 20 minutes on the slowest of printers these days. I was able to dial in the action and even custom spacing between strings, sort of like how Bill wanted there. Thats the nice part of this method, the speed you can do them after you do the first one, but tone... not so much, unless you get the right filament i suppose. Anyway thanks for sharing all your kwoledge, this stuff is gold.
Hi Jerry, so glad you are still on YT!! I have learned so much from you, Thank you. I was just on your website and I could not find the link to "products I use" did you remove that link or am I just technically challenged today? Thank you.
I wonder...did you do any work for my grandfather? His name was Rudy Schuessler, he had a bass fiddle. He talked about a luthier he had to drive far to get to him.
Have you ever considered picking up damaged guitars off of ebay or craigslist and repairing them to sell? They would be yours so time would not be a factor for you. As a luthier it is always interesting to get your take on what budget brands are diamonds in the rough when it comes to construction. Many guitars that are considered write-offs on caraigslist, ebay and facebook marketplace would be an easy repair for you.
In your 1200+ videos have you ever showed how to fix an up bow on an acoustic neck without a truss rod. Does heat and clamping and blocking really work? Or are those videos a farce? What about the steam neck reset? Just wanted to ask a real expert ! I have enjoyed watching your videos . thank you !
Jerry, enjoyed the video. I sure wished I would have found your channel before you retired. I have a vintage A style Gibson mandolin that I would like freshened up. Any chance you need a new friend or perhaps an unmarried sister 😊. JW
Jerry. Your viewers are like the government of my country. They want you to keep working till long after you are dead...🙃 enjoy your retirement sir, and thanks for all you've taught me.
I recently bought a new guitar from one of the no-middle-man-buy-direct-to-cut-cost-on-line-companies and it sounds like crap and really hard to play. It's pretty well built but they really didn't make sure it was ready to play. Some strings sound like I'm hitting a hollow coconut with a hammer and other strings sound like a bee hive is in there somewhere. The low strings are too high at the first fret and the high strings are too low. I really had to crank a bow in the neck to get the strings off of the 12th fret to a reasonable height I have a 25 mile drive to the nearest luthier and he's advertising on craigslist. . lol.. I either buy all the tools to destroy my new guitar or take a gamble with craigslist guy.
What an interesting line of work. I wanted also to pay you a compliment on your son. You did it right! He is a wonderful young man! The kind of man God sends to do HIS work. Hugs for such a wonderful son! (I love your daughter in law's laugh...she is so stinkin' cute!) (They should have more children lol)
Ok... Since there are several comments regarding CDs, I will ONETIMEONLY take email orders MONDAY morning only. Send me an email with your name
address, etc. I will then send you a PayPal invoice that you can pay with PayPal or a different credit card. I have 2 CDs still available. One is called Heavenly Music. It is all Gospel Bluegrass with one or 2 original tunes. The other is called Its In The Wind. This one is all original tunes and includes both Gospel and regular Bluegrass Each CD is $12 plus $4 shipping I will sell both for $22 and $5 shipping. Probably won't do this again.
Thought it could walk down some stairs. Poor thing. Glad you fixed it man good job
???It'll be one am here so I'll try to stay awake for this rare sighting of the lesser spotted guitar wrangler ...😉😉🤘
Please be sure to keep watching after the "altro video" for additional video that was not included in the main video.
"Altro" is not a word in English. I think you mean "outro", which is the opposite of intro, although in this case perhaps "extro" might be more appropriate.
Brings back some good old times watching you do this repair. Turned out great as usual. I have learned so much from you Jerry. I do repairs with confidence now days. Thanks for the video
Yeah I am certain it could be fixed. But, unfortunately, I am retired. You might check with Caleb my former apprentice. Caleb Mills Guitars on YT
He was so lucky to have trained at the feet of the true master! 🎸🎻🪕🎼
So good to see the master at work again! ❤
This was not a kit. It was misc parts selected by Bill at the factory. It is NOT bolt on.
Is that buckle rash on the upper side of the back at the waist?
Chip, I remember seeing you for a long time in the comments. Thanks
? It's good to have you back in your Guitar shop Jerry. Great video. You covered a guitar setup in a way that any novice could follow your steps. The repair work and the new frets were just a bonus. Thanks. Watching your videos gave me the courage to work on my own guitars and I was well past 75 years old when you got me started. Now I am 82 years young. Added a question mark just so you would read this. LOL
I'm behind you. I'm 78 and always enjoyed Jerry's repair videos.
you guys make me feel young at 65! thank you both for that and thank you for being here! I hope your Sunday is great in every way!
Mr. Randy Schartiger - I cannot tell you how great it is to have gems like you and Jerry providing your videos. I had a small crack in the back of my guitar that may have only been in the finish, but I used CA glue and a razor blade with scotch tape and I am very happy with the results. Thank you. And Mr. Rosa, you are so talented as well.
Nella, you are basically correct. The 1st shop was where the AirBNB is now. Then moved into where my office is now. Then moved out into the shop at the present location when I hired Melissa and Caleb.
Nice work Jerry really like watching your expertise
I DO miss your repair videos, as I'm sure many others do as well!
Thanks Sue... I try
The best guitar content channel ! I swear if you started building something easy like telecasters you’d be able to sell em no probleme. Rosacaster !
The Rosameister is the best!!!
I miss your videos on repairs. Will enjoy this one for sure.
??? Really looking forward to this. Love watching your repair. You are truly an artist.
tra tutti i liutai che girano su youtube, sei sempre il migliore
Great to see you fixing a guitar again Jerry. Love the work you do so hope we get to see some more repair videos in the future. 🙂
I’m happy for you and retirement Jerry, but I miss these. 😊🎸
That's one of the best sounding guitars I've heard in a long time. And I'm 77 as of 12/2/24. Really good job !
Thankgod he’s back fixing guitars….😮
Jerry thank you so whole heartedly for the insize tool, I use it every day still and greatly appreciate it and appreciate you dear friend! so good to see you working again! I'm almost in the same problem you are dealing with my hands! I charge $50+ to make a nut or saddle BECAUSE it takes so long! one customer thought I machined his new saddle it was intonated so well, I said nope I filed it every bit by hand and don't even have machines to do it with lol I guess he was happy :) keep on rocking it brother! you are my hero and wish you all the very best!!! God bless you sir!
Papa you are welcome. They are great pickups.
I’ve learnt so much about acoustic guitars it’s amazing! Thank you
Yes, interesting video. To protect the upper surface of the top soundboard from scratching it with a file, when the edges of the frets are processed with a file approximately 156 millimeters long, you need to stick two pieces of masking tape on top of each other (as the luthier did in this blog, they were blue), you need to put two leaves from cardboard of millimeter thickness approximately, and glue it to the top with masking tape. This will be more reliable to protect the varnished top from a file.The possibility of him jumping off to no purpose.
The old Farm House is not ready for BNB. It might be one day.
Great Stuff...Thanks!
Jerry, when you were having trouble clamping the glued headstock, you forgot
about using wedges, to give yourself a square and flat clamping are. 😁✌🖖
Thank you Richard. Very kind of you.
An awesome great video and a super great job on the guitar. Bill is lucky to have a friend like you. I truly enjoyed the video and the repair. I do miss watching you work on the music instruments. Thank you for sharing this. Stay well and safe Gerry.
More than Jerry, thank you Bill for bringing in your guitar and having Jerry work on it.
What a pleasure it was seeing the master at work again...and yes, I did learn a thing or two.
Stay well, Jerry!
I keep a can of compressed air around to use to force the glue down into the crack. It saves a little time in waiting for the glue run down into the crack.
Rod not all that much though some would argue that point.
Appreciate you still putting these up after your well deserved retirement! I always learn new things, even if I only dare work on my own cheap solid body electric guitars!
Boy, Jerry, it sure is a nice surprise to see you repairing another guitar. Thanks for video taping and letting us watch along.
Good comment for a good repair video! Especially the chunk missing from the back; well done! As good as it gets! Only thing missing was something like a brief rant on hide glue... 😊
Know that you retired, but I miss your repair videos!
Hope more of your friends need help.
Nice work Jerry!
Thanks for the video. Your views on these videos show that they are still appreciated 😊
Good to see you again Jerry. Your video was very much worthwhile! Thanks for putting it out there.
Always the master! It’s truly enjoyable to see your instrument repairs; better than any TV! I’m happy you showed us this repair. Thanks as always from Gilbert, AZ.
I INJOY WHAT YOU ALL THE TIME
Makes me happy seeing you working on instruments Jerry. I get it, arthritis is awful. Still, makes me smile seeing you flexing your skills
1K+ upward thumb, and 13,366th fan view. Nice to see you tinkering with instruments again; hope your hands don't hurt too much when you're done. Cheers.
Looking forward to this one.
Great to see you in the shop doing what we all love to see you do! Have a wonderful day Jerry.
Fully understand you retiring, but great to see you working your magic again, perhaps you could do one repair every month? Sure hope you consider it, would make a lot of people happy.
glad to see a guitar repair again. keep up the good work jerry from long time viewer from kentucky.
What a great video. I really miss your work and results. Stay well Jerry.
Jerry, I’ve enjoyed and learned so much watching your videos. Thank you for sharing your skills and craftsmanship!
Jerry I have a epiphone acoustic guitar from the 1970 s and the neck looks more like a electric guitar and I was told it would break and it finally did, I was wondering if it can be fixed, l guess it was a common problem? Thanks
I dont know how you fixed that bad spot on the back and make it look so good one thing I struggle with ,very nice repair Jerry !!!!
Sounds and plays like a dream! Great video
Nice to see you back to the bench Jerry very good vidéo
Hi Jerry;
really enjoyed this video. I love Merle Haggard songs. Thanke for picking that one.
After watching many of your repair videos this was a good review. I appreciate the hard work you put into your videos. Keep smiling, Adam
Good to see you back in the saddle Jerry!
Thanks Jerry I really enjoyed watching this repair .The song was great too 🇬🇧
Great video Jerry, thank you 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Round
Great repair and finishing Jerry,Im sure Bill loves it even more,Cheers!
Jerry Jerry Jerry awesome as always 👍🤘
That guitar is beautiful
Thank you for all your shared knowledge !! Also your talent is wonderful .
Jerry love when your doing the guitar repairs. Have missed it so much.. bee in 🇮🇪. When are the rosa string words coming to Ireland to play some gigs.❤
Another job well done! Looks so much better ..hope Bill is happy with it!
brilliant ,very educational and entertaining.
Missed u guitar doctor!
I wonder if that really nice looking volute on the back of the headstock did anything to protect the neck from further damage, or the headstock breaking completely like how some Gibsons do when they are dropped.
Amazing job!
Nice work, great tips, have you considered 3d printing the nuts? The plastic isnt as hard as tusq, but i have to say its not as bad as i thought after 3d printing a replacement for my Yamaha. It didnt loose its characteristic jangle sound although i did notice less attack right away. The PLA plastic i was printing with was definately more softer then the stock plastic that came with the guitar but surprsingly didnt change the tone, and after awhile i got used to it and didnt even notice the difference. They do have exoitic carbon fibre glass infused 3d printing filaments that could get close to tusq or surpass it i bet. I personaly dont have the kind of 3d printer to do those exotic filaments otherwise id experiment more. Learning CAD to do the nut was hard enough, although probably the simplest shape to learn the basics of pading and pocketing. The whole shape is just a triangel from the side view, "padded" in another dimension gives you the nut width. The string slots are rectangular pockets, and thats the basics of CAD - pads and pockets to make all these weird shapes. Its not as easy as i thought and the softare is really janky to use (freecad) but once you get your shape and dial it in you can print them off, like 20 minutes on the slowest of printers these days. I was able to dial in the action and even custom spacing between strings, sort of like how Bill wanted there. Thats the nice part of this method, the speed you can do them after you do the first one, but tone... not so much, unless you get the right filament i suppose. Anyway thanks for sharing all your kwoledge, this stuff is gold.
The illusive 10mm!!
Hi Jerry, so glad you are still on YT!! I have learned so much from you, Thank you. I was just on your website and I could not find the link to "products I use" did you remove that link or am I just technically challenged today? Thank you.
Sure missed ur workin guitars really bad njoy ur content
Loved 5he song!
Great job Jerry!!!!!))😊🎸🎸🎸
I wonder...did you do any work for my grandfather? His name was Rudy Schuessler, he had a bass fiddle. He talked about a luthier he had to drive far to get to him.
Men como puedo conseguir una tapa de ese modelo no la consigo por ningun lado graciad o plano
Excellent video
Brilliant stuff...
Love that song ! Good sining'n
Have you ever considered picking up damaged guitars off of ebay or craigslist and repairing them to sell? They would be yours so time would not be a factor for you. As a luthier it is always interesting to get your take on what budget brands are diamonds in the rough when it comes to construction. Many guitars that are considered write-offs on caraigslist, ebay and facebook marketplace would be an easy repair for you.
In your 1200+ videos have you ever showed how to fix an up bow on an acoustic neck without a truss rod. Does heat and clamping and blocking really work? Or are those videos a farce? What about the steam neck reset? Just wanted to ask a real expert ! I have enjoyed watching your videos . thank you !
Jerry, it just ain't easy being You! 21:15...
Great job
Jerry, enjoyed the video. I sure wished I would have found your channel before you retired. I have a vintage A style Gibson mandolin that I would like freshened up. Any chance you need a new friend or perhaps an unmarried sister 😊. JW
Yeah I’m getting that glitch also.
Jerry. Your viewers are like the government of my country. They want you to keep working till long after you are dead...🙃 enjoy your retirement sir, and thanks for all you've taught me.
One item you did not measure or check was neck relief...Optimally it should be .004"-.008" for Bluegrass aggressive playing.
If your friend had kept some of the original back wood offcuts, it would have made a nice patch instead of the mashed section.
Randomly you got a shout out from author Perceval Everett on Late Night With Seth Myers 😅
Was the video glitching only for me towards the end there or is anyone else seeing the same thing?
Wood shavings then glue on the back I would try
Nvm you did 😅
I recently bought a new guitar from one of the no-middle-man-buy-direct-to-cut-cost-on-line-companies and it sounds like crap and really hard to play. It's pretty well built but they really didn't make sure it was ready to play. Some strings sound like I'm hitting a hollow coconut with a hammer and other strings sound like a bee hive is in there somewhere. The low strings are too high at the first fret and the high strings are too low. I really had to crank a bow in the neck to get the strings off of the 12th fret to a reasonable height I have a 25 mile drive to the nearest luthier and he's advertising on craigslist. . lol.. I either buy all the tools to destroy my new guitar or take a gamble with craigslist guy.
Hi Jerry, is it matilda
The fret board groove sanding residue should be saved.