I built the CMS Guitar to celebrate the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment at the CERN LHC collider. This blog documents the construction of the guitar and my musical projects featuring this instrument.
Friday, July 27, 2012
CMS guitar @ Hardronic 2012
Wow.
This year's Hardronic broke all the records. We had over 1000 CERN personnel plus guests rocking out!!
The guitar played great. I tried to play great. The videos are coming, watch this space.
Labels:
cern
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Ready!
Ladies and gentlemen: the CMS Guitar v1.0 is ready.
As announced earlier, the instrument will debut during the 2012 CERN Hardronic Music Festival on Saturday July 21st, during my performance with Miss Proper and the Moving Targets, around 23:30 CET.
You can watch it either in person or through a live webcast, details at http://musiclub.cern.ch/hardronic
Electronics
As the neck is drying I finished up with the body - put in the switches and knobs, pickups, soldered the connections in the electronics compartment
And this is how she looks now:
Monday, July 16, 2012
Headstock decals
The final touch to the headstock is the logo. Two logos, in fact. One is the official CMS logo - like in http://cms.web.cern.ch/. The other my logo - "TRAQ guitars". The second one goes on dark background so I had to make white lettering. The way to do this is to print out the black letter outline on decal paper and color the inside white. Then when the decal is applied upside down, the black lines covert the white and create nice edges for the letters. Here's what it looks like:
I had quite a number of failed attempts with this, from accidentally tearing the decal to brushing over it with nitrocellulose lacquer and ending up brushing the decal itself away. So i decided this needs to be sprayed, the only thing I had available in a spraycan was automotive acrylic clearcoat (I didn't want to fire up the spraying rig again, plus I've run out of 2K paint anyway).
So I buried the headstock face in that. This is an intermediate picture after several layers:
Since I could still see the surface having a different texture over the decals, I levelled the whole thing with P1000 wet&dry sandpaper and sprayed on a few more coats. Waiting for them to dry now.
I had quite a number of failed attempts with this, from accidentally tearing the decal to brushing over it with nitrocellulose lacquer and ending up brushing the decal itself away. So i decided this needs to be sprayed, the only thing I had available in a spraycan was automotive acrylic clearcoat (I didn't want to fire up the spraying rig again, plus I've run out of 2K paint anyway).
So I buried the headstock face in that. This is an intermediate picture after several layers:
Since I could still see the surface having a different texture over the decals, I levelled the whole thing with P1000 wet&dry sandpaper and sprayed on a few more coats. Waiting for them to dry now.
Friday, July 13, 2012
Frets, dots etc.
Getting the neck ready for action. First I installed the side dot markers:
After that the time came for the instalation of the five frets.
Hammered them in, made sure they stay put by running superglue down the slots, leveled, recrowned, dressed the fret ends and finally polished to a mirror shine:
Then after installing the nut I could finally put on two strings to make sure everything is aligned and working.
After that I've taken her apart again to do the final bits of work - headstock logo, electronics installation etc.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Announcement: First public performance coming soon
I am planning to debut the finished CMS Guitar at the 2012 CERN Hardronic Festival on July 21st, during my performance with Miss Proper and the Moving Targets. The festival will be webcast live to all the world. Details will follow soon on:
http://cmsguitar.blogspot.com/
http://facebook.com/traqq
http://musiclub.cern.ch/hardronic
Monday, July 9, 2012
Some work in the headstock area
After the neck came out of the clams with the fingerboard on, I turned my attention towards the headstock. First, I want to add something to the part where the original logo is. I chose padouk again since the color is already present throughout the design.
I managed to cut out a piece matching the shape and glued it on. On the following day I put together a simple jig for shaping the edges of the fingerboard. Running the neck along I can precisely trim it down to get the fingerboard with almost perfectly matching the neck. Then I can finish up with sandpaper glued to an I-beam to make sure the line is straight.
Finally, I used the sanding drum to shape the part of the fingerboard behind the nut. Here's how it all came out:
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Gluing on the fingerboard
The fingerboard is now in the clamps for 24h. After that, the fingerboard and the neck will be One. (I hope)
Friday, July 6, 2012
Inlay done!
I have to say I'm proud of how this turned out. After two tests in different wood to get a feel of the technique I finished the inlay in the ebony fretboard for the CMS guitar. Here are the last steps:
I sanded down the two lines, time to start on the hardest part - the little "electromagnetic shower" at the 12th fret.
I had to freehand this with no templates, I just drew the lines in pencil and kept going over them with deeper and deeper passes, trying to repeat the same path each time, so that the channel didn't get wider than the router bit (which was already a bit too wide for the veneer strips). Here's what I got after 5 or so passes:
Since the lines are intersecting, the best way to do it I came up with was to glue the veneer in two steps. First, four maple strips:
Then, after sanding these down the following day, the padauk. As the lines curve a lot more here I though I'd try pre-bending the veneer to avoid it breaking on me. I tried my soldering station, set the temperature at the lowest I could get (200C) and tried to bend the strips after wetting them. It took 2-3 tries to get what I wanted, but the result was surprisingly good - I nearly perfectly reproduced the curves:
So after another day of waiting for the epoxy to harden, here's the end result after initial sanding.
Not bad for a first time, I'd say. :)
Labels:
fingerboard,
inlay
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
On the discovery of a new particle (Higgs?)
And so it happened today and we have announced the observation of a new particle at the LHC. CMS and ATLAS both showed evidence on the level of "five sigma", which means that the probability that what they're seeing is just a result of pure chance is more or less the probability of rolling the dice eight times and getting a six each time.
This particle might be the Higgs boson - something that was postulated for the first time in 1964 and had since then escaped detection. The significance of this discovery is bigger than many people think. Some are calling it the biggest scientific achievement of the 21st century, and something bigger than the landing on the Moon - and I think they're right.
Let me try to put this into perspective, from the point of view of a physicist working on the same experiment but searching for different, yet undiscovered, particles. This will be a bit long, so bear with me.
First of all - particle physics is what we call "fundamental research". We don't ask "what can I use this for?" or "whom can I sell it to and for how much?". We ask "why?". And we're trying to find answers to this question studying Nature at the deepest and most fundamental level - at tle level of interactions of particles that everything Science can describe is made of.
Its a bit like trying to solve a jigsaw puzzle. Blindfolded.
You reach into the box, hoping that your hand finds a new piece, and then try to arrange the pieces into something that makes sense.
And in fact in the 2nd half of 20th century we managed to arrange them pretty well, into something that we call the standard model of particle interactions. It's the most precisely measured theory to date. In the early 1990's it looked more or less like this:
You can see it looks pretty good, there are just two missing pieces. The one on the right was pretty obvious and it was found in 1995 by the experiments running on the Tevatron collider in Fermilab near Chicago. That's the top quark, the sixth particle in a family of particles making up the protons and neutrons in the atomic nuclei. Something that just had to be there.
The missing piece in the corner is something different. That's the Higgs boson. We need it to complete the puzzle, without it our theory is incomplete in an obvious way... but that's not the end of the story. You can see that the puzzle should extend in other directions, we believe that this is also the case with the standard model. We have many reasons to believe that the standard model is not the final, ultimate "theory of everything". In fact it doesn't even describe "everything" (it cannot describe gravity for example). But we have yet to see something new, some piece that would fit somewhere along the borders.
How are we looking for new pieces? We're reaching into the box where the pieces should be. Building stronger and stronger accelerators, we're able to reach further and further into the box. Remember, we can't see, we can just reach out and hope we find something.
And today we finally announced that our hand searching the box found a new piece:
At first glance it looks like it could be the missing one there in the corner. But checking whether it fits exactly will still take some time. This is the situation we're in at this moment.
What are the possible outcomes?
Option one
It is the standard Higgs boson. Everything fits. We have solved the puzzle... and unless we find some other new pieces in the meantime, we are starting to be in trouble:
we sort of expect there to be more to it, but we're not really sure where to start looking... game over?
Option two
It is some more exotic variant of the Higgs particle - it fits, but not exactly in the spot we thought initially:
this is much a better option as we would finally have a clear indication where to look for new things. Look: there's a whole new unpopulated row now!
Option three
It is something that ends up not fitting at all. I'd say its very unlikely, but possible - and would for sure be fun.
And what is my part in the game? I, along with many other physicists, still have my hand in the box. We're still reaching out, way beyond the spot where the piece found today was lying. We're doing this in parallel to the Higgs searches, hoping that we will eventually find something like this:
A completely new particle, in a completely different place. Hinting at a lot more to come...
This particle might be the Higgs boson - something that was postulated for the first time in 1964 and had since then escaped detection. The significance of this discovery is bigger than many people think. Some are calling it the biggest scientific achievement of the 21st century, and something bigger than the landing on the Moon - and I think they're right.
Let me try to put this into perspective, from the point of view of a physicist working on the same experiment but searching for different, yet undiscovered, particles. This will be a bit long, so bear with me.
First of all - particle physics is what we call "fundamental research". We don't ask "what can I use this for?" or "whom can I sell it to and for how much?". We ask "why?". And we're trying to find answers to this question studying Nature at the deepest and most fundamental level - at tle level of interactions of particles that everything Science can describe is made of.
Its a bit like trying to solve a jigsaw puzzle. Blindfolded.
You reach into the box, hoping that your hand finds a new piece, and then try to arrange the pieces into something that makes sense.
And in fact in the 2nd half of 20th century we managed to arrange them pretty well, into something that we call the standard model of particle interactions. It's the most precisely measured theory to date. In the early 1990's it looked more or less like this:
You can see it looks pretty good, there are just two missing pieces. The one on the right was pretty obvious and it was found in 1995 by the experiments running on the Tevatron collider in Fermilab near Chicago. That's the top quark, the sixth particle in a family of particles making up the protons and neutrons in the atomic nuclei. Something that just had to be there.
The missing piece in the corner is something different. That's the Higgs boson. We need it to complete the puzzle, without it our theory is incomplete in an obvious way... but that's not the end of the story. You can see that the puzzle should extend in other directions, we believe that this is also the case with the standard model. We have many reasons to believe that the standard model is not the final, ultimate "theory of everything". In fact it doesn't even describe "everything" (it cannot describe gravity for example). But we have yet to see something new, some piece that would fit somewhere along the borders.
How are we looking for new pieces? We're reaching into the box where the pieces should be. Building stronger and stronger accelerators, we're able to reach further and further into the box. Remember, we can't see, we can just reach out and hope we find something.
And today we finally announced that our hand searching the box found a new piece:
At first glance it looks like it could be the missing one there in the corner. But checking whether it fits exactly will still take some time. This is the situation we're in at this moment.
What are the possible outcomes?
Option one
It is the standard Higgs boson. Everything fits. We have solved the puzzle... and unless we find some other new pieces in the meantime, we are starting to be in trouble:
we sort of expect there to be more to it, but we're not really sure where to start looking... game over?
Option two
It is some more exotic variant of the Higgs particle - it fits, but not exactly in the spot we thought initially:
this is much a better option as we would finally have a clear indication where to look for new things. Look: there's a whole new unpopulated row now!
Option three
It is something that ends up not fitting at all. I'd say its very unlikely, but possible - and would for sure be fun.
And what is my part in the game? I, along with many other physicists, still have my hand in the box. We're still reaching out, way beyond the spot where the piece found today was lying. We're doing this in parallel to the Higgs searches, hoping that we will eventually find something like this:
A completely new particle, in a completely different place. Hinting at a lot more to come...
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Painting time
And so the time has finally come to do some spraying. I'm a little uneasy as this is my first time with a real automotive spray gun. And I'll be using 2K urethane clearcoat - catalyzed two component paint. So any screw-ups will be hard to fix, but at least the paint should be durable and dry quickly (days as opposed to weeks). No test runs this time - it either works out or it doesn't. To make this even more fun I'm doing three guitars at the same time, as you can see in the picture below:
After shooting the first coat of clear I had the guitar looking like this:
Following this with a second coat after 30 minutes, the clear is flowing out quite nicely.
Time to lay her down to sleep. It turns out that I don't have the amount of paint to do many coats, but from what I know on cars they only do about 1.5, so if I manage to get three or four in total I should be fine... I think. I will probably not be sanding this since I'm anyway keeping the puzzle-like surface so... we'll see.
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