JOHN STAX

 

JOHN STAX
john@cigarboxguitar.com.au
03 5968 5477
Menzies Creek VIC Australia
 

I first got interested in music when I was about 13. We had an old banjo at home which I managed to get a tune out of. I was instantly hooked and together with my mates played endlessly. Looking back I think the sounds we made were pretty awful but I'm sure we thought we sounded great!

In the sixties in the UK there were bands starting up everywhere. It was as though a musical virus had swept through the whole country. It was natural for us to start a band of our own. We didn't do covers of anything in the top 40 but being 'Purists' we only played Blues / Rock'n'Roll / R&B. We listened for hours on end to Jimmy Reed, Slim Harpo, Chuck, Bo, Howlin' Wolf, Billy Boy Arnold and a host of guys that had that sound and feel that gets it right into your soul!

We formed the Pretty Things in 1963 and within a few months of starting the band we had landed a recording contract with Fontana Records. After a lot of grief with the A & R man about songs and arrangements, we finished the first album 'The Pretty Things'. That album and the next one 'Get The Picture' became the bands' most pure and popular albums. Very collectable now. I left the band in 1967 and in 1970 emigrated to Australia. I started building a mud brick house in 1985 in which I now live with my family.

I began making guitars in 1995 including solid electric and acoustic guitars and mountain dulcimers and now I am heavily in to Cigar Box Guitars.

 

FIND FRET POSITIONS IN THIRTY SECONDS WITHOUT
A COMPUTER OR CALCULATIONS THAT DRIVE YOU CRAZY

I know that good people like Stewmac have them online, but my formula allows you to have, at your fingertips, the ability to find fret positions for any scale length for any instrument, be it a uke or a giant Mexican guitar, instantly. All you will need is a simple, cheap calculator. A friend of mine gave me this formula a few years ago but it wasn’t exactly accurate. So I tinkered with it for a couple of hours until it was as perfect as possible.

Just to prove that it works perfectly lets use 600mm as the scale length (nut to bridge). The scale length can be as long or short as you care to make it. By using 600mm it will be easy to see that at the 12th fret the distance should be half of the scale length (300mm), and at the 24th fret a quarter (150mm) thus proving the formula.

Lets enter 0.943878 x 600
Now press = once
We get 566.3268
This is the distance from the bridge to the 1st fret.
Press = once again and we get 534.5434
This is the distance from the bridge to the 2nd fret.
Press = once again for the 3rd fret and so on.

When you get to the 12th fret it should read 300.01402 (octave).

Keep going to the second octave (24th fret) and we get 150.01399 thus proving that the formula is accurate for our purposes. Only use 2 digits after the decimal point, ignore the rest that follow as they are too small to be relevant.

Now here’s an interesting thing I discovered quite by chance. I wanted to turn metal slugs on the lathe to the sizes of the spaces between the frets so that I could line them all up in a slot cut in a piece of flat board, and clamped to my pull-saw. Then cut each fret taking away one slug at a time until I had a perfectly cut fingerboard. The way to find these sizes leapt off the page at me – EUREKA!

Put in our formula again as before 0.943878 x 600.
Now press = 10 times and we get 336.75
Move the decimal point one place to the left and we get 33.67
This is the distance from the nut to the 1st fret.
Press = once and we get 317.85
Move decimal point again (once to the left) and we get 31.78 which is the distance between 1st and 2nd frets.
Keep pressing = until all distances between frets are found.

You can use wooden dowel for the distance pieces. All you will need is a drop-saw, lots of dowel and lots of patience. It helps to use a digital vernier.

I hope this is of use to you. Have fun! John Stax

P.S. Write down the formula in a few places that you can locate when needed. JS.

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