Getting into offsets is what brought me to your channel and I have to thank you from one luthier to another, your vids are happening...in spite of missing the nut replacement part of the vid.
Hi Mike 😁 I learned from a mechanic when we rebuilt the top end of a Toyota 2TC engine that the push rods should go back in where they came from. I grabbed a cardboard box and we stuck ‘em in there, later to be numbered. I do the same thing with pick guard screws on customer guitars, just draw the shape on some cardboard, stick ‘em in, and they stay there until you’re ready. Although your way might save trees… please recycle folks ♻️ Thanks for your wit, humor and wisdom 🙏
This is fun to watch as always. Back when I had a piano shop I used to just talk to myself. It never occurred to me to get a camera. Hip-tip from the piano shop: we had to put screws back in the exact holes because they were sometimes hand cut screw threads with differing pitches. So changing the position of the screws would instantly strip the hole. When I took a screw out I’d poke it in a piece of cardboard that had a [very] vague drawing of the thing the screw was coming out of. If you push the screw all the way through a bit of tape keeps it secured. An advantage beyond recording the position of the screw relative to which hole was that the drawing would let you know if anything was missing and from where. You may already know this technique. It may be swatting flies with a sledgehammer. Anyhow, I love the show.
I’m never not blown away by the amount of detail you believe in Mike. Even down to which scratch plate screw goes where ... that’s professionalism right there man.
Small world that you know Mike Baranik! I’m friends with Jason Kostal (own one of his acoustics- with another on the way), and Mike is a great friend and influence on Jason! I met Mike a few times, and always have been amazed by his acoustics- yet I’ve been lusting over his electric builds lately... truly pieces of functional art! Great work Mike, the Jazzmaster is a winner!
Dude, just discovering you over the last couple weeks. What a cool, thoughtful, intelligent guy you are. I’ve learned much on an immense world that has been dormant for decades, recently awakened from sudden acquisition of a pink CV Jag. Thanks for all of your sincere and dedicated contributions here.
Great content again, do not change your style, I am in the middle of a JM upgrade, all your obsessive compulsiveness has actually shone a light on areas I had questions about, from pickup foam / grounding / pickup choice / vibrato & bridge replacement/ soldering connections / you are a craftsperson + your chord progressions are awesome. Please do not stop!
Just what an old guitar like that deserves. Reminds me of a '63 Strat I played that was a complete dog. Perhaps with the same level of tlc it would have played great.
Recently been building a parts caster so seeing such a thorough video really helps. I'm contemplating buying a descendant bridge so I can avoid adding a shim although I wonder if it'll give steep enough break angle. Maybe ill get a mastery to match the bridge!
The 2 bits of golden knowledge that without any one who watch ur channel are by inserting a bit of paper some times as small as a paper match into the neck pocket is all that is needed to change ur opinion on jaguar's from them being fenders biggest folly... a farce of shiny metal and switches... there are even knobs installed sideways like switches... after shim... feels like a whole new thing and possibly the most impressive achievement of electronics and guitar lmao... the second thing is that u love nuts.. one could say u find nothing more satisfying and therapeutic as working on nuts... but the most enjoyable are skinny nuts... lmfao
21:22- Okay Mike, I'm about to turn 69 years old next week. So it makes sense that I'M aware of "Brusha, brusha, brusha. It's the new Ipana" and Bucky Beaver. I KNOW you weren't around then.
@@Puisheen Grandparents,...Jesus,....thanks. My arthritis thanks you, too. By the way, when you were fussing over which pickguard screw should go where, you reminded me of someone,...me. Ah, OCD. Ain't it great??
Yeah, Tom! I'm glad you can hear it too, there's just something about real-deal Jazzmaster pickups that work better for my play style. Lots of note definition but still plenty of those 'woodier' frequencies I like.
Great job Mike! Another thing you didn't show was when you had to replace one of those 12th fret marker dots. 😅 Oh well, I get it. Shit happens.. It can be hard to remember every single thing sometimes.
Nice! Such a beautiful instrument. Would you be able to provide a link to Mike’s work? I’ve been trying to find some info but I probably am misspelling his last name.
Hi Mike, Was hoping you might know where to grab a set of conversion thimbles to replace a metric sized tune-o-matic. Dont see them on staytrems website/webstore. Thanks for any leads. Oh and my staytrem bridge that's on my Bass VI is great, does staytrem get overshadowed by Mastery? Loved this series of videos.
Just wondering if my Low and high E are making contact with the screw on the tremelo plate, is my action too low? I find lately high E strings are breaking. I wish i could buy flat screws i like low-action.
Reissue screws don't have the flat top that vintage screws had, so contact on newer guitars is pretty common. Sometimes that means the bridge height is a little low, but you can also just flip those outer two screws upside down next time you have the strings off.
"Believe it or not I actually really enjoy making nuts. It's kind of a therapeutic thing for me. I really enjoy the ah pace at which I have to work to do my best work, and there's nothing like taking a blank piece of bone and turning it and shaping it into something that's really attractive visually and something that works beautifully. So those are things that I really like" - Puisheen gone sexual?
happy, healthy, safe and ready for offset class with professor mike
Sometimes I pretend I'm a shiny screw, but really inside, I'm an extra crispy boi.
Now it feels like a TV show season ended. Love these series
one year later I got the chance to enjoy this video series, great work.
Getting into offsets is what brought me to your channel and I have to thank you from one luthier to another, your vids are happening...in spite of missing the nut replacement part of the vid.
Hi Mike 😁 I learned from a mechanic when we rebuilt the top end of a Toyota 2TC engine that the push rods should go back in where they came from. I grabbed a cardboard box and we stuck ‘em in there, later to be numbered. I do the same thing with pick guard screws on customer guitars, just draw the shape on some cardboard, stick ‘em in, and they stay there until you’re ready. Although your way might save trees… please recycle folks ♻️ Thanks for your wit, humor and wisdom 🙏
ua-cam.com/video/-IOMNUayJjI/v-deo.html
Awesome show.
“Today, Micheal will be modeling a delightful cardigan from the Rick Nielsen collection.”
- Vogue for Guitar Techs, probably
You have such a calming vibe here. Reminds me of watching the Norm build furniture on the New Yankee Workshop on PBS in my teens
So glad you leave in all the moments you say you’ll cut out! It’s great and relatable!
Ahh... my weekly inspiration to pick up my Jazzmaster.
Nice work, Mike!
It's A great job to bring back an old guitar.
This is fun to watch as always. Back when I had a piano shop I used to just talk to myself. It never occurred to me to get a camera. Hip-tip from the piano shop: we had to put screws back in the exact holes because they were sometimes hand cut screw threads with differing pitches. So changing the position of the screws would instantly strip the hole. When I took a screw out I’d poke it in a piece of cardboard that had a [very] vague drawing of the thing the screw was coming out of. If you push the screw all the way through a bit of tape keeps it secured. An advantage beyond recording the position of the screw relative to which hole was that the drawing would let you know if anything was missing and from where.
You may already know this technique. It may be swatting flies with a sledgehammer.
Anyhow, I love the show.
Friday morning coffee with Mike and Lobster, the nicest guys in Guitar Land...
I appreciate what you do.
I’m never not blown away by the amount of detail you believe in Mike. Even down to which scratch plate screw goes where ... that’s professionalism right there man.
Beautiful work Mike, you should be very proud. Kyle is so lucky to get to enjoy all of your hard work! Also, that cardigan is next level
Great work making an old guitar new
Your videos have helped me a lot, building a partscaster jazzmaster
Small world that you know Mike Baranik! I’m friends with Jason Kostal (own one of his acoustics- with another on the way), and Mike is a great friend and influence on Jason! I met Mike a few times, and always have been amazed by his acoustics- yet I’ve been lusting over his electric builds lately... truly pieces of functional art!
Great work Mike, the Jazzmaster is a winner!
What a lovely instrument - great job, man!!! Love your enthusiasm for quality.
Dude, just discovering you over the last couple weeks. What a cool, thoughtful, intelligent guy you are. I’ve learned much on an immense world that has been dormant for decades, recently awakened from sudden acquisition of a pink CV Jag. Thanks for all of your sincere and dedicated contributions here.
Great content again, do not change your style, I am in the middle of a JM upgrade, all your obsessive compulsiveness has actually shone a light on areas I had questions about, from pickup foam / grounding / pickup choice / vibrato & bridge replacement/ soldering connections / you are a craftsperson + your chord progressions are awesome. Please do not stop!
I’ve really loved this whole series! Makes me want to start an old fender project.
Teared up a little. It sounds so damn good...
Find someone who pays attention to you the way Mike pays attention to pickguard screws
Thanks for your videos. Learnt to keep my Squier Jaguar in shape
“Before I close up...” Mike da Soigeon!
4:22 when your buddy rolls a superb marijuana cigarette
Probably better now than it was new. Fantastic job!
Lovely job on the whole guitar.
I've heard of matching headstock but matching soldering iron is really next level. ;)
I’ve got a white super light weight AO Jazzmaster and it gets better every time I play it.
14:20 band name - Super Crispy Boys
You’re awesome for sharing this whole process with us.
What's the history on tub shields? When did Fender stop using those? Are they interchangeable in new vintages?
_I hope you're happy, healthy and GOT A BOD-Y!_
Just what an old guitar like that deserves. Reminds me of a '63 Strat I played that was a complete dog. Perhaps with the same level of tlc it would have played great.
The soldering iron martyrs the guitar...this satisfies me
Gorgeous nut. Absolutely top-notch!
Been waiting for this one!
Jeez that is incredible.
it turned out so beautifully! great job mike, as always :D
Really awesome series! Thanks!
I’ve been waiting for this video. Awesome!!!
great job on the wiring and if u a jaguar kit step by step that will be awesome tip for ya
Recently been building a parts caster so seeing such a thorough video really helps. I'm contemplating buying a descendant bridge so I can avoid adding a shim although I wonder if it'll give steep enough break angle. Maybe ill get a mastery to match the bridge!
Anybody know the chords used in the lovely progression that starts at 32:35?
The 2 bits of golden knowledge that without any one who watch ur channel are by inserting a bit of paper some times as small as a paper match into the neck pocket is all that is needed to change ur opinion on jaguar's from them being fenders biggest folly... a farce of shiny metal and switches... there are even knobs installed sideways like switches... after shim... feels like a whole new thing and possibly the most impressive achievement of electronics and guitar lmao... the second thing is that u love nuts.. one could say u find nothing more satisfying and therapeutic as working on nuts... but the most enjoyable are skinny nuts... lmfao
21:22- Okay Mike, I'm about to turn 69 years old next week. So it makes sense that I'M aware of "Brusha, brusha, brusha. It's the new Ipana" and Bucky Beaver. I KNOW you weren't around then.
haha I have a deep connection to things like that thanks to my parents and grandparents.
@@Puisheen Grandparents,...Jesus,....thanks. My arthritis thanks you, too. By the way, when you were fussing over which pickguard screw should go where, you reminded me of someone,...me. Ah, OCD. Ain't it great??
This sounds so WOW! I love it! it is so much better than the Fender Japan Hybrid "60s guitar. I see what you mean about the pickups.
Yeah, Tom! I'm glad you can hear it too, there's just something about real-deal Jazzmaster pickups that work better for my play style. Lots of note definition but still plenty of those 'woodier' frequencies I like.
Got me at the end! Hah.
Phoebe Bridgers shoutout 👍🏻
Great job Mike! Another thing you didn't show was when you had to replace one of those 12th fret marker dots. 😅 Oh well, I get it. Shit happens.. It can be hard to remember every single thing sometimes.
Great job !
Great video! Is there a string brand you can recommend that doesn't need the ball ends soldered?
I've had good experiences with GHS, DR, and D'Addario XTs (presoldered)
Mike, I'm not sure if you've listened to "Hey riddle riddle" but that cardigan has got me thinking of "the sweater"
Who're you callin fret nippers, fret nipper?!
Nice! Such a beautiful instrument.
Would you be able to provide a link to Mike’s work? I’ve been trying to find some info but I probably am misspelling his last name.
BEauUtiful WorKK i absolutely adore that flaming on the back of the neck, it's beautiful -sirpants
Hi Mike,
Was hoping you might know where to grab a set of conversion thimbles to replace a metric sized tune-o-matic. Dont see them on staytrems website/webstore. Thanks for any leads. Oh and my staytrem bridge that's on my Bass VI is great, does staytrem get overshadowed by Mastery? Loved this series of videos.
I came here for Jazzmasters and stayed for Koala puns
Supa cool!
Nice jazzmaster
It sounded like the beginning of a Tom Waits song while you were tuning. Very musical (or would it be beary musical?)
Just wondering if my Low and high E are making contact with the screw on the tremelo plate, is my action too low? I find lately high E strings are breaking. I wish i could buy flat screws i like
low-action.
Reissue screws don't have the flat top that vintage screws had, so contact on newer guitars is pretty common. Sometimes that means the bridge height is a little low, but you can also just flip those outer two screws upside down next time you have the strings off.
This video is all the more enjoyable without a music track.
Love your work, but seriously, powered tool for the screws on a vintage guitar???
Super Crispy Boi
"Believe it or not I actually really enjoy making nuts. It's kind of a therapeutic thing for me. I really enjoy the ah pace at which I have to work to do my best work, and there's nothing like taking a blank piece of bone and turning it and shaping it into something that's really attractive visually and something that works beautifully. So those are things that I really like" - Puisheen gone sexual?
Seriously though, great job. Guitar came out great!
Hey mister you are awesome!!!
I would really
Like to get in touch with you about working on my guitar