My week doesn’t feel complete until I hear “well hey there gang” ….
@ahf54716 ай бұрын
My week doesn’t feel complete until I can watch a giant Nordic wordsmith pontificate.
@mattc87236 ай бұрын
Best gang ever!
@jamesellams6 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@DanelonNicolas6 ай бұрын
hahahahah same
@nicolen.96426 ай бұрын
Same here.😊
@disgruntledfaerie6 ай бұрын
"I can only make noise." *proceeds to play something beautiful*
@frankfarklesberry6 ай бұрын
That tapered sanding of the bridge pin is a gem of a tip. I occasionally find myself pushing that pin back in while restringing.
@davidkeeley84736 ай бұрын
When StewMac decides to open up its Canadian Division, I can see Ted as the next Dan Erlewine on "How To"..
@bubuguaiguai27 күн бұрын
"Polishing, polishing, polishing..." always puts smile on my face! 😊
@WildBillJr6 ай бұрын
I’ve owned a Seagull for several years. Passed it on to my grandson when he started lessons.
@jsk70294 күн бұрын
First guitar I bought for my son was a spruce top Seagul dread. Loudest guitar i have ever heard, literally drown out others if played together. Thing that really brought back memories is the truss rod noise it would make when cold while equalizing temps when it was cold outside.
@beenaplumber83796 ай бұрын
I love that bridge pin hack! I only play cheap acoustics (mainly a bassist), and that's been a recurrent problem. What a simple fix! And yeah, HAPPY CANADA DAY to Ted and all my Canuk friends in the Great White North!
@satchelpaige58686 ай бұрын
Best way to wrap up a weekend is to spend it watching a great repair on here with Ted
@KevinJonesMedia5 ай бұрын
Thank you for including the touch up job on the first Seagull! I opened a guitar repair shop about a year ago and touch up work like that is still the bane of my existence, so seeing a pro trying something, saying "nope, let's try something different" and then reaching a point of saying "I won't be able to make it disappear completely, but here's the best that can be done" is refreshing and reassuring to me because sometimes I spend way more time than I should trying to make a scar disappear when it's just not going to happen without a complete refinish.
@pamartin6 ай бұрын
Excellent advice on sanding the bridge pin. Also, I have curled the ball end into a large "C" so the ball would ride up the slot on the pin. Your solution is smarter. It eliminates the problem without having to teach the customer anything new. Again, bravo. Keep on!
@mikaso6 ай бұрын
Wow Ted, is it something I been smoking, or did you just ramp up everything about this video, by like 300%? The history part on the brands, the in-depth pedagogic level on a multitude of foundation topics, e g fret dressing/recrowning, relief/intonation/setup, saddle/pin/nut, and surface touch-ups (and possibly more). It's like a super beginner-friendly and a masterclass at once. And, you made both those beauties friggin sing at the end! The proverbial hat's off, brother! Also - please consider letting the gang in, if there is something more serious going on, than a very early midlife crisis. Although I can offer little more than my prayers, I would more than happy to try to help out.
@TheMightyYak6 ай бұрын
Honestly I didn't notice any significant improvement over past videos. He makes consistently high quality videos.
@troyclayton6 ай бұрын
I learn so much watching these videos. 5:30 This opened my eyes, I'd failed to understand* that a vibrating string needs space to vibrate. It's so simple, and I understand better now. Thank you. edit: * I originally typed "grok", but wondered if anyone would understand.
@MrDblStop6 ай бұрын
Some of us are old enough to have grown up on Heinlein 👍. Do kids still read that kind of thing?
@earlelfrink6 ай бұрын
Yep...grok.
@mikaso6 ай бұрын
Appreciate the informative edit, friend! 👍
@goodun29746 ай бұрын
@@MrDblStop, That depends on whether they need to eat dead companions in order to grok them.......😮
@nevarmaor6 ай бұрын
I grok that.
@adrianforbes62216 ай бұрын
Thanks for your regular posts. I always look forward to them.
@phil361356 ай бұрын
So glad you put these videos out,I look forward to watching every week.To be honest this is my favorite channel in You Tube land. Thanks again.
@GilgaFrank6 ай бұрын
"A flock of Seagulls" drew a genuine out-loud snort of laughter from me.
@TheRobman6 ай бұрын
Whereas I ran so far away from that line, lol
@ShadeAssault6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment about intonation, "...it's playing sharp which means we should move the bridge back to lengthen the strings...". I've had a bear of a time getting the intonation right on my Firefly strat. I eventually gave up on it and was just playing it as-is. The G, B, and high-E were fine but I could not get the low-E, A, and D to intonate. For some reason that comment you made clicked in my brain. 5 minutes later and the guitar I have have been playing for 8 months is now perfectly intonated! Now gonna have to run downstairs and check my Squier Tele cause I'm sure I was having the same issue with it.
@frankcarter64276 ай бұрын
my beloved old art and luthier folk cedar is in similarly tatty shape - sign of a loved instrument
@andrewmize8236 ай бұрын
I seem to remember a Dan Erlewine video where the fretboard of a guitar--I want to say it was Albert King's Flying V?--was a few mils short from decades of nut replacements, and Dan had to rebuild the missing portion with superglue and rosewood dust. It was a space perhaps the width of two or three sheets of paper, but apparently it was significant enough to make the intonation wonky.
@tjm54926 ай бұрын
That rh cutaway Seagull has a beautiful voice and wonderful clarity.
@giovanni50636 ай бұрын
Hello, been waiting. I needed to do work on my 72 POS Epiphone and your tutorials were the veritable Godsend I needed. She's a good-tempered girl now and I have been giving her a workout. Because of circumstances I needed to bead a couple of ball ends onto string ends, and I rotated my ebony bridge pins 180 degrees to have the unslotted part on the string ends. Works pretty damn well for me.
@peachmelba10006 ай бұрын
I'm in the camp of "preloading" the neck (for lack of a better term) with physical relief via selective fret dressing (4th fret to 9th fret, a few thousandths only) and with upper fret fall away.
@NoBSMusicReviews17 күн бұрын
By the way, your channel is my new favorite channel. I absolutely adore it. And I love the tangent you go on, like the one about epigraphy, or Different types of adhesive used for different purposes, obtain from natural materials, by Native Americans. Keep up the great work!
@agcrannyАй бұрын
Thank you so much for your superb videos. I'm teaching instrument repair in a college in Dublin, Ireland and your ideas are really helpful. While I trained as a Luthier in Spain I am unqualified in repair work and you have got me out of tight spots.
@thatmountain2 ай бұрын
My seagull does the bridge pin thing too and I also have a ton of honest wear on my sound hole/top. Glad I'm not alone.
@davestambaugh728215 күн бұрын
I find that the shaped fret files leave a lot of machine tears that have to be sanded out to polish. The plated abrasive one don't. But they don't last long.
@jimamsden6 ай бұрын
When I bought my Goodall RSC1368 back in the late '90's the shop had a Goodall with a cedar top that just sounded incredible. It had a high end color that was heavily. I got the RSC1368 because its construction was more traditional and I was concerned about the strength of that cedar top. It's now 25 year later and the RSC1368 had mellowed in a very pleasing way visually and tonally. I don't regret not getting the cedar top instrument.
@RayBecker6 ай бұрын
Seagull is to acoustic what Reverend is to electric; they play and sound really good. They're affordable and you can't beat them if you're a working guitarist. My brother has a Seagull from the 1990's and it just keeps on going.
@monsirto2 ай бұрын
Beautiful stuff. As a lefty I recommend picking up an upside down fiddle every now and then. I play differently and think differently when I borrow a righty from my daughter lol
@copperaudio96646 ай бұрын
"fairly aggressive strum-er" Godzilla? 😇 I have a Seagull and love it. Thanks Ted.
@AJMjazzАй бұрын
I always liked Seagull guitars. Warm sounding, durable, great value for the money. I really like the headstock design, efficient and no nonsense. Great video! New subscriber here. Thank you!
@tonyg61586 ай бұрын
I love these guitars I use to sell them in Hamilton. A little store where I use to teach guitar when I was off the road.
@that_thing_I_do6 ай бұрын
I've been following for a bit and enjoy seeing the crack repairs because, after all, penetration is paramount.
@caseysmith5444 ай бұрын
My Brother a Bassist loves the chambered body basses that Godain makes, he has a 4 string chamber body Bass from the early 2010's when the brand switched from a previous model to the one now with the thumb rest and has some ability to computer. He traded a 12 string Bass he has from Yamaha for the instrument.
@doakwolf6 ай бұрын
Love the tip on the bridge pin taper! Thanks Ted
@1-eye-willy6 ай бұрын
thank you for puting me onto Lee valley, ive found alot of tools on that website that you can not find anywhere else, alot of japenese knives and wood working tools.
@0whitestone6 ай бұрын
You say "I've changed my mind, guitars don't need as much relief as people say," but what I hear is "I've gotten so skilled that I can setup with less relief." I think that's time and experience more than absolute truth. I can do a setup on my own guitars, but I'm sure I'd need a bit more relief.
@richardlee68866 ай бұрын
Thank you sir for carrying us along for the ride. Hope you have a good week.
I'm a big fan of Seagull guitars. When I set out to buy a new acoustic guitar in 2022, I tried just about every sub-1000$ guitar that the local Long & McQuade store had on hand, and nothing came even close to the Seagull S6. The one I initially tried was an S6 Slim with the narrower neck which I did like, but it had a ding in the finish. They had an S6 Original still in its box in the backstore area, we opened it up and it felt and sounded even better than the Slim. A couple years later I am still in love with this guitar which IMO sounds pretty close to a J45 for a fraction of the price.
@Nigelv6 ай бұрын
I bought a Segul S6 folk with the ceder top and no pick guard from cash converters back in high school. It has Been coast to coast in Canada with me and shows the play wear. probably the best $80 buck ive ever spent.
@violao2066 ай бұрын
Seagull Guitars are fantastic value for money. A working pal used to really make his sing, but now he has a pedestrian Martin that he bangs on here in Seattle on his gigs.
@xXVintersorgXx6 ай бұрын
Love my seagull "s6 original". It sounds great and it's basically indestructible. Got it from guitar center in the 2000s I think
@scottreeves12266 ай бұрын
Beautiful work on beautiful sounding guitars. Thanks.
@Geeman0026 ай бұрын
Wow, I never knew that Seagull guitars were so well built. Don’t see them much down here (nj), but once again I learned something new. Thanks 🙏
@LordEvan56 ай бұрын
Love these videos I have tried for at least 25 years to play guitar and let me tell you I just can't do it I've been playing smoke on the water iron man and the intro to stairway the whole time but I can enjoy watching guitars get fixed that much I've got down
@gregoaks44136 ай бұрын
Liking the Korg TM-60 tuner Ted uses ... it has everything ya want and nothing ya dont ...simple but accurate ... love that approach !
@rankenfile6 ай бұрын
Nice work, and great sounding guitars!
@davemcquade29506 ай бұрын
Bought a LYS guitar around 1980...loved it!!
@stimpsonjcat672 ай бұрын
My S6+CW is still my favorite acoustic. Cedar top...just a very soulful guitar...very dark.
@ishgumi446 ай бұрын
Amazing bear claw and flame on that Sitka top. I have had this almost identical guitar for years. Excellent, focused sound with tons of overtones and sustain. Love me a Seagull!
@guitfidle6 ай бұрын
Those both sound great! Seagull really does have some nice guitars, heck pretty much everything Godin makes is good.
@gavinpearcey6 ай бұрын
I have a 1996 s6 I bought brand new a Mountain Music in Hamilton (which has recently closed, Scott and Craig retired), they were big proponents of Seagull there. Mine was about $300, and has its share of dings now, but has a gorgeous cedar top that has become even better with age. I wouldn't trade that guitar for anything.
@TheRumbles136 ай бұрын
Hi Ted! Big fan from Alberta. Happy Canada day!
@HayesTech3 ай бұрын
The one thing that keeps me from getting one, is the way they've changed attaching the neck to body. The older models are fine, but not the newer ones. Good luck with a neck reset, when it's needed. But they are good sounding guitars
@ChristopherANeal6 ай бұрын
I just bought a Seagull 12 string after the refretting video, based on your endorsement and my experience selling them two decades ago. Best purchase I've made in years.
@nevarmaor6 ай бұрын
I have a Seagull acoustic, Natural Expressions, with extra wide nut (1.8"). That matches my Godin Multiac nylon. And I have a La Patrie classical made by Godin (2" nut). Also the Seagull Merlin 3-string "strummable dulcimer". Love them all. The one thing missing from the Seagull guitar is a pick guard. Not a big issue since I tend to not use a pick a lot but sometimes I like to.
@fulci67346 ай бұрын
Thank you Ted 👍🎸❤🔥
@Prellium6 ай бұрын
I owned either a Seagull or Art & Luthier back in the mid 1990s and I remember it was a lovely instrument but was really neck heavy.
@mightyluv6 ай бұрын
After using a crowning file for a few projects, I’m going back to my safe edge flat file for fret crowning; I can see exactly where I am and where I need to remove more or less material to maintain the shape.
@goodun29746 ай бұрын
" Seagull, you fly, across the horizon into the early morning sun/ Nobody tells you where you are going, nobody knows where you're from......" Bad Company
@John-d9e4x6 ай бұрын
I had a twelve string Lys, gave it to my son, great instruments. I wore out the sound hole edge, on my J-50, finger ⛏️ ing with national steel picks,
@martinburke-x4i6 ай бұрын
nice work ted!
@mrkkitson6 ай бұрын
Always awesome work... Thanks!
@michaelpilgrim81316 ай бұрын
Thank you, Ted.
@barrieglenn83532 ай бұрын
I have a Taylor 410 and the top Is nearly warm through in 2 places, a the sound hole is extensively warm, it has been played hard, but it sounds great, I always say buy a guitar that looks like it has been played.
@barrieglenn83532 ай бұрын
Please excuse bloody autocorrect
@allenmitchell096 ай бұрын
My first acoustic was a seagull. It got ruined it when I experimented with heavy gage strings and it sheared the soundboard on either side of the hole essentially pulling the neck into the body. 😢
@jabeavers5 ай бұрын
I own a seagull (that looks almost exactly like that first one!) and played it for years, then I built my own guitar so it would be intonated correctly....
@Halfaloaf5996 ай бұрын
I needed this, thanks Ted.
@bengordon23306 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@slo52836 ай бұрын
! glad to see the Ronsonol Bottle is back
@MikeGervasi6 ай бұрын
I have a Minstrel (Pre-Seagull) and a 12 and 6 Seagull. I love em.
@johnnyx98925 ай бұрын
Who remembers "Jonathon Livingston Seagull"?
@FMitchellFelling2 ай бұрын
My dad's favorite book. I preferred "Illusions" by the same author.
@jellybean79315 ай бұрын
I like your Videos very much!
@stevenkarnisky4116 ай бұрын
I have had bridge pins get pulled out during re-stringing. Next time I will know what to do!
@dalgguitars6 ай бұрын
Fantastic. Thanks!
@drno21416 ай бұрын
lovely vid mate, funny that i've never liked seagull sound..too "crispy ovation" like if i can describe...but loved my first norman and had tried a red art et lutherie wich was amazing..build by the same company
@BuzzcutGtr6 ай бұрын
I bought a Seagull in the late 80's. Sounded great until about mid-1994. That's when the scarf joint at the headstock let go. Then it became wall art after I bashed it against my radiator 7 or 8 times. Will never buy another one.
@keestoft2506 ай бұрын
Noticed Kim Deal of The Breeders was playing a Seagull S6 dreadnought at Glastonbury this weekend.
@jeromestevenfaigin60596 ай бұрын
When my Uncle Tom passed away in 2017 I inherited his Martin D28 from 1973 and his mandolin also a Martin with it's tiny fingerboard. I also inherited his Seagull 12-string which I never really played since my wife has a Taylor 12-string as well which I used once for a recording. 12-string instruments are weird since I only use them for recordings and afterwards they sit on a wall or in it's case until needed, in which by itself is rare. Still there nice to have one. But two? My wife's Taylor is a jumbo body and Uncle Tom's is a dreadnought with a cedar top. Since cedar only is for non-aging instruments (I believe) you have to think, is this the sound I want forever or do I want a spruce top to become a better sounding instrument if I wait for 10 to 20 years from latter down the road if I wait?
@Skier_2022 ай бұрын
The nut might be after market but Seagull uses Tusq nuts and saddles on their guitars. So it also might be original.
@mccypr6 ай бұрын
Thanks! 😎
@cugir321Ай бұрын
Wonder if that's a bolt on neck that seagull also epoxied? Seems to be a thing with them.
@dwreal171720 минут бұрын
They should get Stephaun to sell these Seagull gutars
@sickb22006 ай бұрын
Speaking of soft cedar tops...ever taken a good close look at Monte Montgomery's 1987 Yairi DY62C? You can find a few good pics online. I saw him and that guitar last year in Tulsa, OK. I can't believe it's still holding together after all the miles he's put on it - not to mention the "string rips" he used to employ at the end of the shows from time to time.
@Scodiddly6 ай бұрын
Another great episode!
@3373-g8z6 ай бұрын
They’re damn good guitars for the price.
@stephenbridges27916 ай бұрын
I think Seagull has discontinued the one I have. The Coastline Grand parlor guitar. I like it because of the tone is excellent for such a small instrument.
@timothycormier34943 ай бұрын
Hahahah the name of this guitar makes me laugh. The majestic dump duck😂😂😂
@fasteddie41456 ай бұрын
Happy Canada Day!
@telecasterbear6 ай бұрын
The fingerboard with the 'seagull' inlay at fret 12, has a separate piece of wood glued to the treble, and bass sides of the fingerboard, as in place of fingerboard bindings. Is it a production thing, like the center of the board is slotted for frets, then the edges get a clean piece to coverup the fret slots?
@mrclaus8596 ай бұрын
Thanks Ted
@jeffthevideoguy236 ай бұрын
If you ever go to Warsaw, take lots of video, so you can say, "Polishing. Polishing, Polishing...."
@JavaoftheLava6 ай бұрын
love seagulls. have a mosaic from before the epoxy use. my #2 guitar. it would be #1 but its not my preferred for fingerstyle that im really into atm
@tonydeemusic16 ай бұрын
The Classical line of Godin is called "La Patrie".
@ryanjohnston85996 ай бұрын
Because of my timezone I'm asleep on initial upload but this is my Monday morning "go to" when having my wake up coffee 👍
@mikaso6 ай бұрын
Same, cheers Ryan!
@activese6 ай бұрын
Hi Ted, thank you as usual, for my nice Sunday treat, no funny line today. I've noticed, that when you measure the string height, you do not press the first fret? so in this case 6/64 and 5/64, pressed at the first fret would be 5/64 and 4/64?, just for reference, as an example, if you ever you present one with 4/64 and 3/64, pressed would be 3/64 and 2/64. Cheers.
@fireantsarestrange6 ай бұрын
I remember when they started selling these things here in the USA.
@nicolen.96426 ай бұрын
I realize I need info about the fret wear. If there are such dimples/grooves and if you recrown them, it takes metal off the frets, doesn't it? I know, I'm a bit duh...but I thought they'd need to be replaced when they have grooves like that...🤔 Thanks for any reply!