Stratocaster guitar, Custom build.

This build started life as a ST Style Paulownia build your own kit. When I received it I decided to do a couple of minor mods to the body

stratocaster

The building of my stratocaster guitar was a very fun and relaxing build. I used paints I had never used before and received excellent results in the process. This is a sponsored build with Thefretwire.com

Stratocaster DIY KIT

This build started life as a ST Style Paulownia build your own kit. When I received it I decided to do a couple of minor mods to the body to make it a little different from others in this design. All of the rounded corners were chamfered and the jack plate hole plugged and moved to the side of the body.

Routing guitar body

My first step was to take the Stratocaster guitar body to the spindle sander. I gently sanded the outer edges of the entire body to square off the sides and remove the rounded shaped look. I sanded with 80 grit the stepped up to 120 grit to get it shaped like I had in mind. the idea here was slow and easy to keep the main shape just make it look a little different so it stands out.

Routing the guitar body

The next step was to remove those annoying rounded over corners. To add some style to the shape, a chamfer all the way aroundis added. I chamfered both sides and where the belly cut is. I let the chamfer fade into the belly cut so the body was not sharp and pointy in that area. With a little hand sanding the belly cut blends right into the chamfers on the back and looks seamless.

I marked a square area around the stock jack plate hole and used a chisel to cut back to the line so the 1/4 in spiral upcut bit in the next step didn’t cause tear out on the body. Use a sharp knife to mark out the lines you want to cut to then take a sharp chisel and cut back to the line you just made so the router bit cuts up to the line cleanly.

filling jack plate hole

I used a small Grizzly plunge router to slowly cut out the hole for the jack plate. Then I plugged it with a piece of poplar scrap 5/8 of an inch thick. A new jack plate hole was drilled into the lower side of the body. Set the depth stop on the router so you know when you have reached the proper depth and take a few shallow passes to get clean cuts down to final depth.

Filled jack plate

After filling the jack plate hole I sealed the body and sanded to make everything look like a factory body. I then drilled into the end of the body to attach the new jack plate.

The next step was applying a few even coats of a heavy silver metal flake paint from Duplicolor. The metal specks paint has a very nice sized flake that is perfect for applying a candy paint over.

The body was sprayed with blood red candy color. Then it was sprayed with 6 coats of clear and wet sanded and buffed. In the sun it really shines!!