I'm building my first instrument. It's going to be a tenor ukulele, which I'm calling a "banjolele" because the box I'm using is a rectangular tin that once held Whitman's candies. It measures 10" x 8.5". I've got all the materials I need at this point, and I'm working on making a nut out of scavenged bone, so that will take me a bit.

As I'm working on things, I've been thinking a lot about that box top. Because this is a through-neck design with a tailpiece, there won't be upward pressure on the lid, but the bridge will be pushing down hard on it. I'm concerned about the whole thing collapsing the first time I put tension on the strings. Because of that, I'm considering some kind of cross-bracing. When I do that, though, I'm worried about deadening the sound. I like the idea of the whole lid vibrating when I pluck the strings. Won't wood bracing keep that from happening?

Then there's the question of the bridge itself. Should I use a banjo-like design to minimize contact with the vibrating lid, or use a big flat bridge to distribute the pressure?

Finally, I'm thinking about soundholes. They will doubtless weaken the lid, so should I put them around the sides of the box instead?

Ideally, I want an arching bridge, no bracing, and soundholes in the lid. I guess wheat I'm asking for is reassurance that it will hold up to the pressure if I do that.

Here's a photo of the tin, if that will help:

You need to be a member of Cigar Box Nation to add comments!

Join Cigar Box Nation

Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • wow! Turned out real nice. I like what you did.

  • Well, I've completed my tin uke. Ended up with a concert size instead of a tenor after deciding to add a tailpiece.

    Here are photos: http://www.cigarboxnation.com/photo/album/show?id=2592684%3AAlbum%3...

    Materials:

    • Tin box
    • Poplar through-neck and headstock with additional poplar neckpiece
    • Additional wood for fretboard, bridge, and neck insert scavenged from ca 1910 2x4s
    • Tuning machines purchased at local guitar shop
    • Bone nut from unidentified animal bone found while camping
    • Frets are 18ga copper wire wrapped around the fretboard
    • Fret markings made with woodburning tool
    • Bridge includes 1910 wood and found bone (will be replacing soon. Too short!)
    • Tailpiece cut from pierced sheet metal pulled out of a disassembled multifunction printer
    • Aquila Nylgut strings

    The only things I purchased were the tuning machines ($16 for 6) and strings ($6). I also bought a dollar store door alarm ($1) to scavenge a piezo from, but haven't used it. The uke sounds bright and pretty without amplification, and I doubt I'll ever need to plug it into an amp. I'll save the piezo for my next build!

    So, total cost (less labor): $22 :-)

  • I haven't got around to a full-metal body yet (too many projects in ront of me just now) but i've got a nice 10.5"x8.5"x3.5" candy tin of my own just waiting on the shelf..

    Due to my own concerns about structural flimsiness i'm planning a variant on Uncle Crow's 'dulcimer style' guitars-nut, bridge and all on a single neck, possibly with a strum hollow carved in, and attached to a bracing bar on the other side of the lid(or bottom bepending on preference). With the entire neck being self contained one has no pressure on the bridge directly into the tin, and if the cigar box versions i've made so far are any indication the the vibrations should conduct directly into the body. Due to the percieved flimsiness of my tin box i'm also going to glue a second brace behind the first-this second brace will not touch the lid at all but will space the entire length of the body and be discreetly screwed into the top and bottom of the box.

    Will the stick-over version affect my tone, lower the volume or just possibly add some 'warmth' to the tin? No way to tell until I get to it I suppose-and i've got a Lap Dulcimer and a 'not sure what it is until i'm done' experiment with a series of small joined boxes, so it may be awhile until I find out...
  • I've built a few tin bodied instruments and played a few more so I figure I'll throw in my ten cents worth of thoughts

    Don't worry about bracing or reinforcing - tins seem to have been fine for even fairly heavily strung guitars. If it's really heavily strung and the metal is thin then the top might bow inward a little at the bridge but that doesn't seem to matter soundwise. As long as it all settles down to a stable state then you're fine. With a through neck design the neck can provide quite a bit of added strength and rigidity.

    eg.

    http://www.cigarboxnation.com/photo/tin-guitar-neckbody-join

    For soundholes in tins I took inspiration from Ovation guitars and made composite soundholes using patterns of smaller holes. Seems a neat way to make a large(ish) opening without overly weaking the soundboard. I think it looks neat too...
    http://www.cigarboxnation.com/photo/tin-guitar-body

    But it might be worth building without soundholes to start with and seeing how the thing sounds (some seem to work well without) - if you don't like the result and you want to try holes then you can always add them later...much more difficult to remove them! 

    For bridges I'm tending towards lightness - either aluminium if I want something adjustable for height or simple wooden ones

    eg.
    http://www.cigarboxnation.com/photo/tenor-banjo-tail

    For tin-bodied instruments that sound fantastic it's worth taking a look at the work of Jon at Tin Tone. He seems to use simple wooden bridges.

    eg.

    http://www.cigarboxnation.com/photo/no-10-the-lux-box
    http://www.cigarboxnation.com/photo/no-22-the-cesarian

    I had a chance to play some of his guitars recently and they sounded really good.

  • Nylon strings? No
    Sound holes? No
    Big tone sucking bolt shit no
    Two feet? Yes. Bend a fork
    Piezo? Fuq no
  • Hi Karl.

    If you are just building a tin ukulele then you'll most likely be using nylon ukulele strings, so the string pressure on the bridge and tin sound board won't be that great, especially as compared to a six-string guitar with steel strings. What I would use is a CBG style "bolt-and-nut bridge", but slip a 1/2" wide by 1/8" thick "slat" of wood of the appropriate length between the bridge and the top of the tin. This piece of wood should distribute the downward force of the strings on the bridge over a greater area, minimizing the risk of denting the top of the tin. Forget the 2 point of contact style of banjo bridge and forget the sound holes. You'll still get a good sounding acoustic instrument. If you want "louder", then add a pup (pickup) and amplifier, something you can always add later. As a first-build instrument you want to keep it as simple as possible.

    Good luck.

    -Rand.

    • Thank you. Your advice about keeping it simple is well-taken. I've been giving frets a lot of thought today, and wow, are there a lot of factors to consider there!

      I do plan to install a piezo pickup, if not right away, then at a later date. I've got the piezo (scavenged from a dollar store door alarm) but I need to get a mono jack.

  • I've made two tin bodied guitars, but that in no way makes me an expert. 

    My first build was a a six stringer with a through neck, but with an electric guitar tailpiece screwed directly into the bottom of the neck wood. The bridge is made from a drawer handle placed right at the bottom, this was an aesthetic design choice not something I'd do again. If you look at the photos, you can see that acute angle the strings meet the bridge. This has the effect of increasing the down force on the bridge, and has squashed the tin a little. I reckon that with the bridge placed further onto the lid, the stress would be more evenly spread, resulting in in less bending of the lid and the bridge being closer to a "sweet spot" for resonance.

    240338976?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024

    You can see that I added sound holes, decked out with screened grommets. I also fitted a magnetic pickup, that's screwed to the lid. I think that the minute you cut into the tin, it will lose some of its resonance. The more holes you make, and add-ons you attach, the sound is diminished. I do also think that the handle having only two contact points might not be ideal.

    240339334?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024

    Apart from the slight bending of the lid, the box is bomb-tight. The structure is fine, as all the other stresses are focused on the neck.

    My second build was a a little less adventurous. A 3 stringer, without any holes or pickups to effect the lid from resonating. I made the bridge from a piece of hard wood with a bolt resting on it, and placed it further towards the middle of the lid. It works fine in my opinion (check out my videos), although the bottom of the box gave off nasty vibrations. This was solved without any loss in sound, by putting shredded grocery bags into the box, a tip I found somewhere on the forums. I haven't tried other types of bridges, so can't really advise you in that area. However, with only three strings tuned G D G, the lid isn't bowing at all and the structure of the guitar is sound. 

    305788305?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024

    I didn't want to mess up the lid by cutting sound holes, and anyway, I was rather pleased with sound it made acoustically. Just after Christmas I picked up an identical sized tin in a different design, and set about cutting sound holes. I can report that I found virtually no change in the volume. So, I keep the second lid to use when I fancy a design change.

    I like your idea of cutting holes in the side of the box, but I'm not completely sold on the benefit of sound holes in tin bodied guitars.

    Anyway, I've prattled on for far too long. If you have any other questions, let me know.

    • What a wealth of info. Thank you!

      Since I'm doing a tailpiece and the bridge will be situated about 1/3 of the way from the tail-end of the box, I think stress will be minimized, as you suggest.

      I kind of like the idea of soundholes aesthetically, so I think the jury's still out for me on that question. I may see how it sounds and feels fully assembled, and if I feel a need, I can always take it apart and add the holes.

      Love that Cadbury tin!

  • Talk to Dan Sleep  http://www.cigarboxnation.com/profile/Iggy?xg_source=profiles_membe... He built my 3 string Tin CBG:

    http://www.cigarboxnation.com/video/cigar-box-guitar-mississippi-fl...

    Enjoy your build, Keni Lee

This reply was deleted.