Hello
I've been a long time reader of this forum but it is actually my first post
Recently I found and bought a guitar I wanted to have for a very long time: Ibanez AH-10 which was Allan Holdsworth's signature guitar from 1985 to 1987 (which was based on a Roadstar II guitar)
Simple and elegant instrument: one humbucker (specially made for that guitar), a tremolo (black PoweRocker unit with aluminum block and tighter, 53mm string spacing), ebony fingerboard with 6100 frets and that's about it.
I got mine in a decent state, for a decent price but one the previous owners decided to remove the original (and really rare) Powerocker Special bridge and to install an Ibanez Edge system... Which I like but it just doesn't match the guitar. And of course, the locking nut was installed as well... A lot of freehand routing was performed to accomplish all this and one of the two brdige posts cracked the surrounding wood.
So long story short, I would like to restore it to its original shape as much as possible which would involve filling the tremolo cavities (front and back) with wood pieces, probably repainting the body and then removing the locking nut (filling the screw holes on the back of the neck) and recreating some sort of filler with the regular nut installed into it.
I also found a Powerocker bridge, but the unit is chrome and it is not the Special one. It will do for now and if I find the real thing I will simply swap it since the mounting holes will match.
So I was wondering if luthier experts on OLF suggest some techniques or tricks to a humble amateur?
Should I simply fill the bridge post holes with dowels or cut out even a bigger opening and refill the hole thing with a maching basswood plug? And what about that locking nut? It there any way to blend in some paint with the existing headstock? Because redoing that headstock decal might be problematic (a lot of very fine print).
Thank you in advance!