joshnothing wrote:
Hesh wrote:
Let us know what you find out please? We have one of these in our neck of the woods that is famous because a lawsuit resulted over the neck joint

You got me curious Hesh, what’s the story there?
Josh Buddy without naming names a Yari was attempted to have it's neck reset and it was a huge can of worms and the Luthier, a very good one by the way could not get the neck joint to release. This was not us to make this clear, we would not have taken it in we are liability adverse from my GE training.
One thing led to another and it was decided by the Luthier to do a California reset which is what we call the process here in Michigan. In California they call it a Michigan reset. No one wants to get any on us.....

So the process is to heat to soften the glue and then slip the neck block and fret board extension without fully releasing them while..... at the same time doing all manner of unnatural acts to bend the body so that when the glue cures again the neck angle is improved. This is not unlike the distortion that may occur to a guitar under tension when left in a hot car for a very long time.
What resulted was a nightmare, body hump, bad neck angle, basically the guitar was ruined.
The gigging musician did threaten to sue, we know him and avoid him now.... and the shop being a very decent shop settled for an amount of money. I know the amount but I'm not saying it here or anywhere.
Anyway we think that slipping the neck block is a very poor practice and we also think that you do NOT take chances or see it as a learning opportunity with the valuable personal property of others. We have a "bailment" the legal term when a guitar is entrusted to us and a duty to use good care and treat her well.
So in the end after this attempt to reset a Yari neck with a California/Michigan/poor practice slip of the neck block everyone lost. The musician was out a one of a kind vintage Yari that he adored, the shop wasted their time, effort and money BUT did step up very quickly and do the right thing.
Wanted to add something here to help inform others why I'm negative about ripping this off or that off and figuring it out along the way......
When I went to work at GE long ago in the "assimilation session" (that's what they called it with new hires and acquired enterprises) we were asked what is "Job one" at GE.
One guy said "making money." The instructor said no. Then a woman said "getting big deals" and the instructor said no. After that it was silent.
Job one at GE was shielding the enterprise from unwanted liability. We were the biggest company in human history and every day some fool somewhere made up a reason to sue us. We attracted every slip and fall artist on the planet because we have a market cap of $36B which at that time was beyond anything any company had ever done. It's mouse nuts these days....
So when I climb my two flights of stairs these days to Ann Arbor Guitars I am 1) looking to enjoy my work and 2) always keen to shield our company from unwanted liability 3) always uber respectful of the valuable personal property of others to such an extent that I treat it as well or better than my own coveted gear and then, then and only then 4) we are ready to make some money.
And with this said we have made some money
If nothing else if I can help others recognize that a single slip of the chisel not only can injure you seriously as the Padma used to say here it can result in you paying out thousands for some ******* instrument that you never should have taken in.
The single greatest mistake that the vast majority of Luthiers may do at one time or for a while until they are no longer working in this trade is trying to be all things to all folks.
It's very OK to say "nope, we are going to decline but you know has done these before and you can contact?" Refer out and spend your time on profitable things that are not highly risky.
My dentist is a professor of Dentistry at the University of Michigan. He has more training than any other Dentist in the state. If I need a crown he refers me out. If I need a toot canal I am referred out again. Extraction? Yep referred out. Professionals specialize we can too.......
Back to the Yari these days it hangs on the wall in this guys house and pisses him off every time he sees it. I've suggested taking it down or even throwing it in a bon fire but he seems to like to wallow.
My old girlfriend used to say "some will, some won't, so what, next..."
