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- Jun 27, 2016
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I recovered a PL-530 plinth for a friend of mine with some Lacewood veneer.
Its a nice looking turn table but the faux wood veneer seems to be peeling off at the edges of all of these TT's.
Happened to be a plinth available on ebay at a good price, purchased it so the TT would only be down a minimal amount of time.
I got a 2x8' sheet of S.A. Lacewood with the 3M PSA (pressure sensitive adhesive). It was about double the price of a nice walnut but its a really cool looking wood with a ton of light effect to it. I will say that its a bit harder to work with than a longer grain wood, pieces of wood easily come off or separate.
After laying out the veneer under a sheet of plywood for a couple days, I cut my pieces and stuck them on. I used a straight edge and razor to cut the pieces. Before applying the veneer I traced a template onto cardboard with all the cutouts and bolt/screw holes so I could easily find them later.
I sanded down to a 400 grit on the bare wood then applied a few coats of "clear" shellac, sanding between coats to hopefully increase the depth and light reflective quality.
Then sprayed 3 coats of lacquer, 800 grit sand on the first and 1000 grit on the second.
semi gloss finish, no stain.
Assembly was a little easier than I thought, other than taking the tone arm off basically it comes off in segments.
edit: satin finish
Its a nice looking turn table but the faux wood veneer seems to be peeling off at the edges of all of these TT's.
Happened to be a plinth available on ebay at a good price, purchased it so the TT would only be down a minimal amount of time.
I got a 2x8' sheet of S.A. Lacewood with the 3M PSA (pressure sensitive adhesive). It was about double the price of a nice walnut but its a really cool looking wood with a ton of light effect to it. I will say that its a bit harder to work with than a longer grain wood, pieces of wood easily come off or separate.
After laying out the veneer under a sheet of plywood for a couple days, I cut my pieces and stuck them on. I used a straight edge and razor to cut the pieces. Before applying the veneer I traced a template onto cardboard with all the cutouts and bolt/screw holes so I could easily find them later.
I sanded down to a 400 grit on the bare wood then applied a few coats of "clear" shellac, sanding between coats to hopefully increase the depth and light reflective quality.
Then sprayed 3 coats of lacquer, 800 grit sand on the first and 1000 grit on the second.
semi gloss finish, no stain.
Assembly was a little easier than I thought, other than taking the tone arm off basically it comes off in segments.
edit: satin finish
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