Specifically they might have used a screw machine with bar feed and cutoff. I doubt very much if anyone was standing there watching it happen. That would be a boring job.
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OK Joe....
So how do you cut slugs with those bull's eye rings, whats the exact procedure? I've looked at metal lathes on Ebay and I don't see how it works....http://www.SDpickups.com
Stephens Design Pickups
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Joe, virtually all the covers have the "FlashCopper under the Nickle plating. Is It nessesary to do this to nicklesilver. Gibson covers from the 70' did'nt have the flash under. Would you have to Perchase the flash also to plate your own covers? Screws dont have flash. Slugs. Why covers. Thats the problem Im haveing trying to age some covers. I like wearing the edges down to the nickle, and still having some of the plating on the middle. The flash shows up as between the plating and the nickle, and its total shit. ???
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Originally posted by Possum View PostSo how do you cut slugs with those bull's eye rings, whats the exact procedure? I've looked at metal lathes on Ebay and I don't see how it works....sigpic Dyed in the wool
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Originally posted by NightWinder View PostJoe, virtually all the covers have the "FlashCopper under the Nickle plating. Is it nessesary to do this to nicklesilver? Gibson covers from the 70s didn't have the flash under. Would you have to Purchase the flash also to plate your own covers? Screws don't have flash. Slugs. Why covers? That's the problem I'm having trying to age some covers. I like wearing the edges down to the nickle, and still having some of the plating on the middle. The flash shows up as between the plating and the nickle, and it's total shit. ???
If one were to plate nickel silver, I don't think a flash coat is needed, but I've never done it either. I would see what Caswell recommends.
If there is a copper flash, it is going to show wherever the plating is slectively worn off. I bet one can use a nickel flash, at least on many metals. Again, consult Caswell.
As for making the edges and corners wear off first, putting the covers in a acid bath with waterlogged wood chips and tumbling ought to take anything protruding down quite fast.
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Originally posted by David King View PostSpecifically they might have used a screw machine with bar feed and cutoff. I doubt very much if anyone was standing there watching it happen. That would be a boring job.
One can buy old manual screw machines on the used market for not that much money, but it takes a mechanic/machinist to set one up. After all, a screw machine is a machine tool.
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Well, this goes back to the acid thing. First, the nickle plating comes off, then the copper flash, and the raw nickle is underneath. So baically, with GJ covers there is a flash coating, and a "finished plating". 2 coatings, that can restrict some transparentcy.
Or is he fucking all of us and his covers are white brass? This is the kinda shit that is just plan stupid.....I'd think that you would'nt need a flash coating, and older gibson covers did not have it. At caswell they explained the flash fills the pits in the material too, so it could be an issue of not using good material, or the tooling is just shit and puts unnessisary stretchmarks in it. ???
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Possum come on over to the house sometime and I'll show you in all the detail you could ever want. If anybody needs a few at a time I'd be happy to oblige provided you sent the material. I can't cut off hardened tool steel, nickel steel or alnico magnets but anything else is fair game, $.50/cut + postage
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Originally posted by NightWinder View PostWell, this goes back to the acid thing. First, the nickle plating comes off, then the copper flash, and the raw nickle is underneath. So baically, with GJ covers there is a flash coating, and a "finished plating". 2 coatings, that can restrict some transparentcy.
Originally posted by NightWinder View PostOr is he fucking all of us and his covers are white brass?It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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Originally posted by NightWinder View PostWell, this goes back to the acid thing. First, the nickle plating comes off, then the copper flash, and the raw nickle is underneath. So basically, with GJ covers there is a flash coating, and a "finished plating". 2 coatings, that can restrict some transparentcy.
Or is he fucking all of us and his covers are white brass? This is the kinda shit that is just plan stupid.....I'd think that you wouldn't need a flash coating, and older gibson covers did not have it.
Another possiblity is stainless steel, plated as needed. Try filing a corner - does it file like steel, or like brass?
At Caswell they explained the flash fills the pits in the material too, so it could be an issue of not using good material, or the tooling is just shit and puts unnessisary stretchmarks in it. ???
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Some of you will remember the problems Andy C at Tonerider was having with surface pitting on drawn PAF covers. It's standard proceedure to plate with copper to fill in the imperfections before applying a layer of the finish metal. polishing nickel is very time consuming and expensive.
As a side note, a lot of nickel covers turning up on my shores are not nickel at all. They have a yellowish chrome plate. This is to get around the RoHS issues which have since been proven to be a very expensive waste of time and money.sigpic Dyed in the wool
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Originally posted by David Schwab View PostI really doubt a thin coating of copper is going to do anything to the sound that the thick cover isn't already doing. Copper foil shielding doesn't effect the tone. Also I don't think any covers are raw nickel... nickel silver maybe. Nickel is magnetic and would pretty much stop the pickup from working properly.
White brass is another name for nickel silver. Nickel silver is copper, nickel and zinc. Yellow brass is copper and zinc.
I know this..... You've stated befor. I originally thought N/S had silver in it?
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Copper flash
these were originally "Nickle plated". From left, sitting in some acid, here you can see the copper plating. The finished one has not been polished, but there are no pit marks, although some seem to have some stretch lines, these are not bad at all. Idealy, I will replate them myself after polishing.
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