Just bought my first ever acoustic guitar (a Taylor Big Baby) used on a local craiglist-equivalent for about 130$. It came in the original gigback which had only one back strap left. I decided to bike home and strap the guitar crosswise on my back… in hindsight I should have realised that the one strap could not be trusted. Anyway I biked for about 3m before the strao broke off completely and the guitar fell on the asphalt. Upon arriving home I found the damage you can see in the picture :( The tuning peg of the G string was very crooked, I pressed it back in shape and for the moment it seems relatively stable…

What do you think I should do? try to glue the piece together myself? get it done professionally? try to get a replacement headstock? thanks for any advice and condolences!

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Homie that crack isn’t all the way through.

    This is a simple fix. You can DIY.

    Remove strings. Remove the hardware for your D string (assuming this isn’t a lefty model).

    Carefully pipe in some wood glue. Get it everywhere but not too much.

    Clamp it with whatever you got. Gotta be sturdy though. 100 rubber bands would work. So would wedging it in your damn toilet seat with enough weight on it.

    Clean off excess glue

    Let the glue set over night.

    Reattach that tuning hardware.

    Restring. You done. It fixed.

    That’ll be $200 for the glue and the rubber bands, plz

    Edit: added emphasis on wood glue. do t use Krazy Glue or any other Super glue. Super glue and wood glue are totally different products. This is an incredibly important distinction to make for a fix like this.

    Edit 2: please DO NOT USE TITEBOND as the person below suggests.

    You WILL fuck up your axe.

    • rugburn@lemmynsfw.com
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      2 months ago

      This. But I’d use hide glue and then after filling the crack with the glue, use a suction cup to pull it through both sides

        • foggy@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Absolutely not.

          Titebond expands. Hide glue/wood glue draws the wood fibers together…

          In this instance we want our adhesive to draw our wood fibers together.

          There is no more amateur mistake you could make than using krazy glue, tite bond, or any other polyurethane-based adhesive, in a situation such as this.

          This point will be drilled into your head should you ever study guitar repair under a Luthier. There are two kinds of glues, and two gluing situations.

          Edit: you can downvote if you want I’m literally making a repair like this ~10 times a year for a Luthier.

          You’re dead wrong. And you’ll fuck up a guitar.