We are installing a solid hardwood floor (nail down) in our home over a plywood subfloorThe room is over the garage and I would like to put down an underlay to help with sound transmission and insulationIs this even a good idea? What kind of underlay is best? Cork? Synthetic? Thanks
Yes I agree anyone can make any two pieced of wood fit togetherWith enough force and pressure one can make any two pieces of matter fit togetherEven sub-atomic particles these days can be fused together with enough energyfor a very short period of time grantedNow for a deeper questionA question about aesthetics and artWhy would a Strat neck look good on an SG bodySheesh! I on the other hand was thinking of attaching a neck of any sorts to a Sheraton Epiphone bodyUnfortunately there are no Epiphone semi-hollowbody necks out thereOh yes I can get a Warmoth but then I could just go to a luthier and tell him to start from scratchSo I am collection all the parts to make a sort of archtop semi-hollow that looks like an ES-330 but with a vintage neck of some sortThe only thing vintage at a reasonable price is an old Kalamazoo KG guitar neckSo I prepare to buy it on OKorder and put this thing together and realize I have no clue how to put in a pickup and electronics into an Epiphone Sheraton and I can't afford a luthier for a project I wanted to do myselfSo I ended up bidding on the Kalamazoo neck and buying a Fender Modern Player Jaguar body to attack it toNow nobody say it can't workBecause it is going to happen even if I have to go to the CERN Syncroclyclotron to smash these to pieces of wood together with Nuclear force:D
you should put one down.it will definitely help with the insulation- if you were laying it in a flat I would say absolutely because of the noise factor- but as it's over a garage you don't have to worry about the room below but probably should look for a better one for the heat loss factorYou can get great ones which are like a condensed shredded cardboard, thats what we have and it's very goodwhatever you use in the end, I definitely would say you need itit will save your heating bill in the end! Garages can be pretty cold!
OK, you just got the apostrophe after the date instead of beforeNo problemNO, You are trying to use parts that are completely mismatchedThe Fender Strat neck is a bolt-on neckThe Gibson SG uses a neck glued into the bodyIf you are a really advanced craftsman, you can alter both the neck and body and make it work, however I don't believe the project is worth the effortWhy not design and build your own body? You can use available hardware and pickupsYou can end up with an awesome guitar that you have handcraftedThe '62 Strat neck is a good place to start.
With some modifications you can make just about any 2 peices of wood fit togetherBut will a strat neck easily go on an sg? NoThe strat is a bolt on type with shims to keep it at the right angleThe gibson is glued onTotally different design
The Strat has a 25 1/2 scale length while the SG has a 24 3/4 scaleEven if you could get the 2 to fit together the guitar would never play in tuneProve this to yourselfMeasure the distance between the nut and 12th fret on both necksThey're differentEven a small difference of 1/16 or less will affect the intonation of a guitar, and you are talking about about 3/8 between nut and 12th fret.