:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The cigar box guitar was invented by people who needed music and had no money. That origin shows in how it sounds. :INFO What a Cigar Box Guitar Is A cigar box guitar is a simple stringed instrument using a cigar box as the resonating body. Three strings tuned to GDG or open G (GBD) are played with a slide. The neck is typically a 1x2 or 1x3 piece of oak or maple, and the box provides acoustic amplification. Most builds also add a simple piezo pickup for electric amplification. The playing technique — slide guitar — requires no fretting and produces a raw, expressive sound associated with Delta blues. :COUNTER.half 3 Strings | :COUNTER.half GDG or Open G :PATH Prepare the Cigar Box Reinforce the box and drill the string holes and pickup cavity. | :INFO Prepare the Cigar Box Choose a hardwood cigar box — thicker lid produces better resonance. Reinforce the interior corners with small wood blocks glued in place. Mark the position for the neck to pass through (centered on the short end). Mark the bridge position at the correct scale length (typically 24 to 25 inches from nut to bridge). Drill a small hole for the piezo pickup wire at the bottom. :PATH Cut and Shape the Neck Saw the neck blank, mark fret positions, and route or carve the truss channel. | :INFO Cut and Shape the Neck Cut a 1x2 piece of oak or maple to 30 inches. The neck passes through the box (neck-through construction). Mark the nut position at the top and the heel position where the neck exits the box at the bottom. Shape a gentle taper from the nut to the heel with a hand plane or spokeshave. Sand through 220 grit. Three-string CBGs do not require a truss rod — neck relief is not critical. :PATH Install the Neck and Set Scale Length Glue and clamp the neck through the box, confirming scale length. | :INFO Install the Neck and Set Scale Length Confirm the scale length (nut to bridge = 24.75 to 25 inches). Apply wood glue to the neck where it contacts the box interior. Insert and clamp. The neck should fit snugly — shim if needed. Let cure 24 hours. Install nut and bridge: the nut is a small piece of bone or hardwood with three notches; the bridge is similar. String height (action) at the bridge: about 3mm for slide playing. :PATH Wire the Pickup and Install Tuners Solder the piezo disk to a 1/4-inch jack, install tuners, and string up. | :INFO Wire the Pickup and Install Tuners Glue a piezo disk element to the inside of the box lid. Solder the piezo center to the tip lug of a 1/4-inch mono jack and the piezo ground wire to the sleeve lug. Mount the jack in the box. Install 3 open-back guitar tuners on the headstock. String with standard acoustic or electric guitar strings: low E, B, and G (strings 6, 2, and 3) are common choices for GDG. :CHECKLIST Parts List [ ] Hardwood cigar box — lid should be solid wood [ ] 30-inch piece of 1x2 oak or maple for neck [ ] 3 open-back guitar tuners [ ] Piezo disk pickup element [ ] 1/4-inch mono output jack [ ] Bone or hardwood for nut and bridge [ ] Guitar strings — low E, B, G [ ] Wood glue, sandpaper, finish :NOTE Slide Guitar Needs High Action Unlike fretted guitar which needs low action, slide guitar plays better with 3mm or more at the bridge. The slide rests on top of the strings — it does not fret them. If action is too low, the slide buzzes against the frets. Many CBG builds have no frets at all, which actually simplifies construction and suits slide playing. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Everything you need for the blues fits in a box. That was the original design requirement. :LINK https://www.cigarboxnation.com/page/how-to-build-cigar-box-guitar Cigar Box Nation — How to Build a Cigar Box Guitar Complete Guide