I have fallen behind on updating the blog. It's time to catch up and document what has been achieved in recent months. In spite of me acting as the world's slowest builder (not by choice...) I am close to completing the mandolin. The mandolin was officially born on February 7th, 2009. To me, this means that on that date it became functionally complete, albeit without the finish. I will post a photo of it's current state in next posting. For now, let's go over what's been done since I've left off
First, let me address my neck angle worries which I stressed over in the last posting. Although I suspect the angle is not ideal, I was able to get decent string action by cutting down the bottom of the bridge saddle to facilitate lowing it. Problem solved = major sigh of relief!
Going back in time - gluing in the lining was fairly straight forward. The kit came in with a solid thin strip for lining, rather then the more common kerf lining. I needed a lot of small clamps, and ended up using everything I had, including wooden clothes line clips with a rubber band reinforcement for extra clamping power. It worked just fine. No need to always buy specialized tools!
Once the glue dried, I continued to flatten the entire edge of the ribs/lining area so that the back plate would sit flush on it without rocking. I feared that clamping the back onto a non-flat area would induce twist in the body. In order to flatten the edge, I created a long sanding stick by taking a flat piece of wood and gluing sandpaper to it with some pray adhesive. This sanding stick method is very useful for various operations.
The big moment of closing the box came next. I approaches the task with a mixture of excitement and apprehension. The back plate was within may be 1mm of the width of the body, so aligning it for gluing was crucial. The glue would make the join slippery and every clamp would pull the back a little this or that way. The solution was a locator pin, pre-installed on the tail block. At least one end wouldbe anchored in place. I could not use a locator pin in in the neck block because , again, the precision needed in alignment. So this was a good enough compromise. I used a...wooden toothpick as the pin and drilled a hole for it in the tail block. Once it was glued in, I cut it short and put a little black marker ink on it to transfer the location to the top plate. I then drilled a shallow hole in the top plate and made sure I had a snug and perfect fit. By the way, the photo below also shows another problem with this kit. The ribs (which came pre-glued to the block) were done....less then perectly...and a visible gap is evident. Luckily most of it would be hidden behind the tailpiece. Same for the gap in the binding. No worries.

Gluing the back on took some fast and careful alignment, before the glue had a chance to set. It's really true what they say - you can never have too many clamps! I used them all - cam clamps. small F clamps, a dozen violin spool clamps. Wherever extra protection was needed, I used some leather scraps to avoid denting the wood. I love this shot. So....industrial.