this post was submitted on 14 Jul 2024
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It’s very hard to get wood glue into a small gap like that. You should remove the piece to apply glue to the entire surface if possible. I just repaired a tiller on a sailboat like this. Don’t try to just get the wood glue in the gap, especially if the gap is small.
I am certified in acoustic guitar repair under a Luthier.
I would heavily advise against removing the wood.
There is still structural integrity by the machine head at the A string. Removing that structural integrity and replacing it by gluing the whole two pieces back together could lead to difficulty keeping it's tuning down the line.
The only proof of my guitar-specific repair knowledge I can provide quickly is that I am aware of stewmac 😁 🎸
Just use something like a toothpick to wedge it open just enough to get glue in there then take it out and clamp, you want to open up space to get glue in, but not enough to break it off or propagate the crack more
Yep.
You can pipe it in like a damn pastry chef. It doesn't need to come straight from the tube you buy it in.
It's important to get it everywhere and use it sparingly. use less than you think but you want it everywhere. Another poster suggested vacuuming out the excess which is fine to do if you've got a beater shop vac you don't mind abusing 😁