Stratocaster Chopping Board - A.k.a. the "StratoChopper"
by gerrit_hoekstra in Workshop > Woodworking
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Stratocaster Chopping Board - A.k.a. the "StratoChopper"
A simple-to-make chopping board from scrap kitchen counter board (a la IKEA) in the shape of a Fender Stratocaster guitar. Next time you have a dinner party for your muso friends, amaze and confuse them by serving cheese on this retro-shaped chopping board.
Materials and Tools
Materials:
* Kitchen Counter board, like oak, maple, ash, about 35mm thick. Mine is a leftover from a kitchen refurb project. Or just go to IKEA and buy a section of kitchen counter. Do not use chip-board kitchen counter!
* Sandpaper
* Tung oil, Counter top oil or Danish oil (not so good as it is not food-quality)
* Liquid paraffin (and old-fashioned medication for rot gut)
Tools:
* Fender Guitar or other guitar with well-known shape, e.g. Les Paul, Telecaster (this is for tracing the shape only - your guitar will remain intact for this Instructable!)
* Band saw or jigsaw. Recommend a band saw, but I managed OK with a jigsaw
* Router with a 10mm-radius roundover bit
* Belt sander, drum sander, orbital sander, linisher, or all of them
* Various grades of sand paper
* Drill and 32mm spade bit for an optional hole
* Pencil
* Kitchen Counter board, like oak, maple, ash, about 35mm thick. Mine is a leftover from a kitchen refurb project. Or just go to IKEA and buy a section of kitchen counter. Do not use chip-board kitchen counter!
* Sandpaper
* Tung oil, Counter top oil or Danish oil (not so good as it is not food-quality)
* Liquid paraffin (and old-fashioned medication for rot gut)
Tools:
* Fender Guitar or other guitar with well-known shape, e.g. Les Paul, Telecaster (this is for tracing the shape only - your guitar will remain intact for this Instructable!)
* Band saw or jigsaw. Recommend a band saw, but I managed OK with a jigsaw
* Router with a 10mm-radius roundover bit
* Belt sander, drum sander, orbital sander, linisher, or all of them
* Various grades of sand paper
* Drill and 32mm spade bit for an optional hole
* Pencil
Trace Shape From the Real Thing
Carefully place your precious guitar on the scrap board and trace the outline as accurately as possible with a flat-sided carpenter's pencil.
Redraw the lines with a dark marker pen to help you better "understand" the curves and avoid mistakes in the next step when cutting the board.
Redraw the lines with a dark marker pen to help you better "understand" the curves and avoid mistakes in the next step when cutting the board.
Cut Out
Cut along the line on the board, being careful to always keep the blade perpendicular to the board. Avoid breathing in the oak dust - it is nasty stuff. If you can connect a vacuum cleaner to the jigsaw of band saw, so much the better.
Add Optional Hole
Make an optional decorative hole where the neck would have been attached. Round the corners over. This is one possible way of elegantly dealing with the familiar guitar shape that is now bereft of a neck.
I used a 32mm spade drill bit, but an auger or Forstner drill bit would have been much better.
I used a 32mm spade drill bit, but an auger or Forstner drill bit would have been much better.
Sand Out Shape
Use whatever sanding tools you have available to smooth out the shape on the perpendicular axis. Don't worry about rounding over yet, since this will be taken care of in the next step with a router and a round-over bit.
Round Over Edges & Final Sanding
After smoothing the outer shape of the 'guitar body', I routed it by hand on a routing mat using a 10mm radius rounding-over bit.
Remember to move your router in a clockwise circle when routing the inside of the hole, and to route in a left to right direction with the work piece edge facing you.
Smooth any remaining imperfections from the routing operation with increasing grades of sandpaper.
Remember to move your router in a clockwise circle when routing the inside of the hole, and to route in a left to right direction with the work piece edge facing you.
Smooth any remaining imperfections from the routing operation with increasing grades of sandpaper.
Apply Wood Finish
The best choice of finish for use with food is tung oil, with a final finish of liquid paraffin for a matt finish.
Other choices for finish are kitchen counter-top oil (which presumably is of food grade?), and Danish oil - which judging by its smell, is probably not the best finish to use on good that are in contact with food.
Apply a diluted form of the finish as a first coat and let it draw in for 20 minutes or so. Wipe off the excess finish with an old rag. Leave to dry for a few hours. Give a light sanding with fine sandpaper.
Repeat these steps using a non-diluted wood finish. 3 coats of finish did the trick here.
Other choices for finish are kitchen counter-top oil (which presumably is of food grade?), and Danish oil - which judging by its smell, is probably not the best finish to use on good that are in contact with food.
Apply a diluted form of the finish as a first coat and let it draw in for 20 minutes or so. Wipe off the excess finish with an old rag. Leave to dry for a few hours. Give a light sanding with fine sandpaper.
Repeat these steps using a non-diluted wood finish. 3 coats of finish did the trick here.