Though the picture reads 2015, this is probably actually from the year before. My first fretted string instrument, this cigar box guitar descended from countless earlier noisemakers. These included cans sporting wires which were manually stretched to vary pitch, a diminutive Altoids tin guitar with screw-eye tuners and a pickup (naturally,) and, most directly, a dual-strung slide guitar made out of a chunk of two by four. For this effort, you can see that actual tuners and fret wire have been obtained. No expense should be spared on a masterpiece.
Design goofs are shared with many cigar box guitars you can find online.
- Strings are stretched over the bridge like on an archtop or electric. On a flat top, they should be affixed so that they can rock the soundboard back and forth.
- The above point ceased to matter anyway when I decided to brace the top against the through-neck, deadening the soundboard completely.
- The bridge should have been made to adjust with shims somehow, or brought down to size. The action is horrible (pawn shop owner might call it "perfect for slide.")
- Threading the strings through the body is a nightmare.
- Hardware store nut and strap buttons.
- Cool looking. Pick guard and jack plate were from the lining inside the box, F-hole is funny.
- Electronics work alright.
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