Alright, I don't know about you but i am fan of the super exspensive les pauls and such with the black/white/black/white type binding around most of the guitar, but those beautiful pieces of art cost 700+ which is not on the budget of someone who is going to university so i was wondering, is it possiple to route out side binding and put the b/w/b/w on the guitar ones self, and on a headstock aswell?
Is it possible? sure, but a giant amount of work, and there are a lot of problems with doing it after the guitar is finished. Also, if you want to do a good job, you need to take the neck out, which is a very big deal.
Would sanding the edges before routing be the best idea?
No, You use tape to keep the lacquer from chipping, and it doesn't work very well. Also, use a very sharp bit, and go fairly slow, but not too slow.
if this is possible without getting to intensely involved or exspensive(its not hard to find a plunging router that's not exspensive) and would this be a no-no on a flame or quilt top?
No, it isn't really possible without getting intensely involved and/or expensive.
The biggest problem is that you would need to remove the neck to do a good job. And LP's are set neck guitars, so your not just unscrewing it. Les Paul neck resets are a giant PITA. Then you need to make the channel. You CAN do this with a Purfling knife or something like the
Schneider Gramil (which should probably be named after the guy in Paracho, Mexico who showed it to Richard Schneider), but that's a very high skill job, and I don't know anyone who actually cuts binding slots that way anymore. In practical terms, for a carved top like an LP, you would need something like LMI's
Universal Binding Machine (which, for all they look pretty straight forward, are surprisingly hard to build right; my dad - who is one of the best wood workers I've ever met - built two before he decided it was more economical to just buy the one from LMI).
Now, if you can manage to do all of that without chipping or burning through the finish, you MIGHT be able to get away without doing any touch up, but it's unlikely. Which is a whole other level of involvement.
I guess the short answer is that in my shop, at $80 an hour for guys who have done all this stuff before and could do it much faster than you, it would be a $1,000-1,500 job. Do the math, but there is no way to do an acceptable job that is anything less than extremely time consuming. In other words, you could get a new guitar for less.
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