Terry for my first couple of basses I scribed the cover on to the bass and drilled the pickup corners and tabs to depth with bad point drills. I then used forstner bits to remove the bulk of the wood in the center and cleaned up the edges with a sharp chisel. You could use the same process to make a routing template in 3/4" MDF or birch plywood. A routing template needs anextra 3-4" of wood all around the hole so that your router doesn't tip off the edge. I like my templates to be rectangular with scribed center lines. That way I can just tape the template down with it's center line lined up with the body's center line and my pickups will end up dead center.
You can always buy the routing templates from StewMac or many of the other luthier specialty places.
I agree that doing these types of precision operations are much easier with a milling machine but if you have a simple set of layout tools; a ruler, scribe, square and some patience you can get all the accuracy you'll ever need. A cheap digital caliper is a huge time saver.
You can always buy the routing templates from StewMac or many of the other luthier specialty places.
I agree that doing these types of precision operations are much easier with a milling machine but if you have a simple set of layout tools; a ruler, scribe, square and some patience you can get all the accuracy you'll ever need. A cheap digital caliper is a huge time saver.
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