Armed with my trusty clothes iron and some foil, I am prepared to remove the bridge from the little ukulele. This has been a great learning experience, but I am a little weary of looking at this thing.
I used the setting a notch or so below the hottest heat level. This is the basic technique. Although, I did tape around the bridge after this picture was taken. The heat from the iron tends to make the finish 'blush' a bit. I forgot about that until right after I started.
I heated the bridge for about 30 seconds at a time, then tried a separating knife (paint palette knife) on the seams.
After a few rounds of heating, I can get the knife under the bridge. It's coming off very cleanly and easily.
There you have it! Came off perfectly. The bare wood on the top will help when I go to align the new bridge.
The old bridge does appear to be mahogany. Originally the plan was to carve a new on from a hunk of mahogany bracewood I have, but I had second thoughts. I just ordered a handful of bridge blanks from LMI, and I think I'll be using one of them instead.
You want a hardwood for the bridge, and mahogany is not as hard as, say, rosewood or ebony. I figure I may as well do an 'upgrade' while I have this thing apart. So I'll wait until the shipment arrives and go from there.
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