no.
Dovetail Joint - band - was created in 1992.
The Fender Telecaster Deluxe is an electric guitar with a bolt-on neck joint and a solid body. This guitar is made of alder or ash and maple. The manufacturer is Fender.
The nut is at the top of the frets, just under the head of a guitar. Its made using bone and is at the joint where the headstock meets the fretboard. Its grooves guide the strings onto the fretboard, giving consistent string placing.
depends on how long it was wet. I go over my guitars every month with windex on a cloth to remove finger prints and so forth , than a bit of non-silicone car wax and never had a problem. fully submerged in water though it should! i mean give it a few days for everything to dry up as all that keeps a guitar sounding electric is a couple of solders. I would be most concerned about the neck joint where the body and neck meet if it's a set neck guitar like say a les paul with no bolts on the neck joint put into laymen terms or the fretboard of the guitar. I'd play every position and hopefully the neck isn't warped as well
if the neck fits in the joint absolutely , but make sure to intonate the guitar so the harmonics line up with the neck which is something big for experienced players, very easy to do. Tune the guitar perfectly than do harmonics on the 12th fret and adjust the bridge until they're dead on. It sounds hard but it isn't. also make sure the neck us sitting on the guitar right because this could create problems on the neck with playabillity. I modified the neck on my main guitar and it didn't sit right on the neck at first and i had some dead notes which went away when the neck was perfectly straight. but hope I could help.
Dovetail Joint - band - was created in 1992.
Dovetail Joint - band - ended in 2002.
its a dovetail
A Common nail joint
Butt joint Mortise and tenon Dovetail Corner joint finger joint
wood joints, but their are different types, butt joint, finget joint, dovetail joint etc.
In my D&T lesson, I believe I know a couple of wood joints. Here are the ones I can remember: -Finger Joint -Dovetail Joint -Halving Joint -Rabbet Joint
2nd answer. There will be books in your public library which will show you this craft. In older work, the dovetail joint is entirely hand fashioned. In modern work, the shape will be fashioned by machine.
Frame joint is used to make frames such as, shelving, book cases etc. Box joint is used to make boxes, such as the dovetail joint which is or predominantly furniture. also the finger joint.
Joints that connect drawer sides are dovetail joints because of their strength.
The 'DOVETAIL JOINT' is very strong because of the way the 'tails' and 'pins' are shaped. This makes it difficult to pull the joint apart and virtually impossible when glue is added. this is why it is bad to make because it is to strong to get it un done.
Dowell joints are popular and effective yet you can't go past the dovetail joint for maximum strength and durability