The sides look great. With that many colors, I would want the top-front to be pretty close to one of the side colors. I'd target the reddish stripes on the sides for the top-front, but that's just me.
Maybe get a piece of exotic wood or laminate some. Burl, birds eye, etc. Spare no expense I say! (Also easy to say when it's not mine.)
jjman wrote:The top-front looks pretty dark and out of sync to me. (So much easier to say when it's not my project! ) Is the inside of the front panel still unstained? Wipe it with mineral spirits to see what it would look like clear coated.
The sides I would consider amber shellac to bring it towards the bottom front and an unstained top-front panel. Then clear. If it needs more color, light maple-colored stain before the clear.
0.02
Youre right black wood seems off, I will use light color wood and now i need it cut to 7.5 - 9 degrees angle which is no way i will cut by hand.
Anyone in Modesto, CA have powertools help a tooless guy? LOL
After repeatedly convincing my better half the importance of macho power tools i got a finishing sander and wow what a difference, it is soo smooth and seamless gluejoints in just a few mins. Looks so much better now than the picture above.
That's coming along really well! You could cut the angle by hand with a nice sharp smoothing handplane. Much cheaper and safer then big macho power tools plus saves a trip to the gym.
Thanks everyone. I thought that my effort will not get results in terms of aesthetics or i was the only one who will like it.
I am now making the front that will be the same as the lightest wood in the cab but with a greenish tint like the single thin stripe in the cab because i already have it around. I made this cab to have a changable front plate so i can chose from dark or light or something diferent in the future.
I will post the pictures soon hopefully within the week.
What i did was:
1. sand everything upto 220grit sand paper until my arms feels like falling off!
2. I then wiped everything with wood conditioner with a clean cloth (but i had my wife grab some expired hospital bandage where she works and it works great).
3. Then I wiped one coat of minwax natural stain and set aside for 24hrs. 4. Sprayed 8 or more coats of poly the following day I got a few minwax semi-gloss spraycans on sale and used 2 cans total for the cab. 2 hours between coats (i did not sand between coats as per spray instructions). Set the cab aside for 2 days to dry completely.
5. I rubbed everything with fine mesh until smooth being careful on corners and edges not to do it too much afraid of hitting bare wood.
6. Lastly, I rubbed automotive rubbing compound to desired shine.
Hey Joey, the cab looks great.. but I would consider a better matching faceplate, it looks like a cherry plate and (IMHO) clashes with the rest of the amp...
I have some questions on your test points in the back, will PM so as to not hijack the thread....
I purchased a cheap Black & Decker Plainer and it worked pretty well for me , just take your time and cut the piece to final size after plaining . I did this for the chassis front plate with a piece of 1/4" maple.