Pocket Ukulele - Home Made Sopranino Ukulele From Scrap Wood
by titchtheclown in Living > Music
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Pocket Ukulele - Home Made Sopranino Ukulele From Scrap Wood
First find a piece of straitish knot freeish wood about 3 and a half inches wide (90 mm) or more and half an inch thick or more and about 14 inches long or more. I got mine from a section of a plank taken from a shipping palette. A longer plank will give a longer ukulele. I have made a 2 foot long one (which is a Tenor Ukulele) using a virtually identical method and a standard soprano as well.
You can see how they sound here
First is the sopranino tahitian style tuning (apologies for the fat fingers)
Second is a tenor Uke tahitian style tuning.
Third is a regular tuned soprano uke all made using roughly the same method.
Mark Out Your Uke
The scale length here was going to be 20 cm but finished up being 22 cm,or around 8 and a half inches.
Excavate Out the Back
Now turn the Uke over and mark out the area that needs to be hollow. Then have at it with your preferred method of excavation. For this small one I decided to go manual and used a chisel. Remember a plane is just a chisel held at a particular angle with a guide to stop it from taking too much off at once, working patiently from either end with the chisel and occasionally using a sharp knife to clear the ends and work on inside of the sides.
It is much easier to do this with a router.
Even I was not perfect and had to glue a crack back together.
If you don't feel up to the hollowing task you can just cut a hole and use something else as a resonating membrane. Heat shrunk PET bottles work magnificently.
Test That It Makes a Good Sound Before You Go Further
Make the Back
Glue It Together and Cut the Shape Out
Shape the Headstock (put a Lean on It)
Picture no 2 is of a headstock on one of my other Ukes where I used a slightly more aggressive angle - a second piece of wood and a face plate- for looks.
Put on a String Anchor
Add a Nut and Mark Out the Frets
Type"fret calculator" into the search engine of your choice to find the lengths you need. An accurate measure is a definite must here. with this short scale length, being only a quarter of a millimetre out will make it sound horrible. The tenor length Uke (440 mm scale length) is more forgiving. A small tip is to mark the sides a little as well as the top so you can see how the frets align with the marks after the fret is on top of the marks on the face of the fretboard.
Stick on Some Frets
Add Tuning Pegs
https://www.instructables.com/id/Good-enough-for-the-bush-Australian-version-of-Tah/step7/null/
String It Up and Play It
I strung this uke tahitian style with 20lb (0.42mm) fishing line and tuned it to CFAD tuning with the top D being re-entrant - only a tone higher than the bottom C.
The fingering is then identical to a standard ukulele only the chords are as if you were playing with a capo on the 5th fret ( 5 semitones higher).
After a few more experimental models, I now go for a 27cm (11 inch) scale length on my sopranino ukes and tune them in octave over guitar tuning (DGBE) with the top d two octaves above the guitar using 40,60, 50 and 30 lb fishing line. This makes switching between guitar and my various Ukes a tiny bit easier on my old brain.
Also here you can see a couple of other examples of where experimenting with these things can take you. The Hootowlele is made using almost exactly the same method as here but has a traditional fret board, a more decorative shape and a standard length, while the spongebob biscuit tin uke has the octave over guitar tuning.
Acknowledgements and inspirations:
The sunshiners from Vanuatu
http://youtu.be/mUyXrpY58lo
I like this guys work
http://www.asonu.com
The guys on the Duckworks wood boat building Yahoo group/forum who provided lots info wood mangling, glue strengths, metal working and getting on with it over the years.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dwforum/
These guys have a pile of info on their site as well:
http://cigarboxguitars.com/
If there is a patron saint of home made musical instruments made from any and all available materials it is this dude:
http://dennishavlena.com/
Found this instructable most useful
https://www.instructables.com/id/Cookie-Tin-Banjo-Part-1--Make-a-Tuning-Peg-Hole-R/
If this guy can make a sopranino ukulele then so can I
http://youtu.be/vlcLGwabQgo
And of course the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain and Jake Shimabukuro.
Don't want a Uke?
Try a pocket violin
http://www.crab.rutgers.edu/~pbutler/pochette.html