What started in Sacha Dunable's two-car garage has now expanded to include a dozen riff maniacs building impeccable riff machines. Join PG's Chris Kies to go inside these guitar junkies' L.A.-based shop.
Dig into this inside view of the Dunable guitars shop in Los Angeles, conducted by PGās own Chris Kies and namesake builder Sacha Dunable. Itās a major step up from the two-car garage where the company started in 2012! Dunable grew from making one-off guitars for Sacha and his fellow Intronaut guitarist, Dave Timnick, by generating word-of-mouth about the instrumentās easy playability and biting rock tone. āBefore I know it, I was getting orders for guitars,ā Dunable says.
Our tour starts in the tonewood storage room: mahogany, limba, mapleāmahogany primarily for guitar necks and maple primarily for bass necks. Fretboards are ebony. For bodies, itās mahogany, limba, and swamp ash. Watch a run of bodies for Dunableās Gnarwhal model in the saw shop (check out the stunning buckeye burl wood for tops) and eyeball the varieties of raw ebony for fretboards. In the CNC shop, youāll see how to design a custom guitar and then observe one of Dunableās two CNC machines in operation. āItās about the consistency, not the speed,ā Dunable assures.
Also, youāll see that all the final cut and trim work is done by hand, as is the artful sanding. (Youāll eyeball a Yeti being smoothed.) In the neck area, Dunable explains the various scale lengths on the companyās instruments, and how some of their production-run necks are farmed out to Grover Jacksonās Tennessee shop. Frets? Dunableās come from respected fret-wire company Jescar, and theyāre typically nickel extra jumbos. After the necks are glued in place, itās time for paint prep: removing minor blemishes, etc. A gel wood sealer is part of Dunableās finishing process, āso you can really feel the wood grain and hear the wood resonate,ā Sacha explains. He displays a fresh black rainbow sparkle finish with nitro lacquer and a rose-gold over swamp ash, which really lets the wood grain show. Also, get a look at a beautifully finished Dunable Minotaur, plus a rare 9-string Yeti (with doubled treble strings).
In the assembly shop, itās time to check out Dunableās own pickups. Theyāre double-wax-potted by hand (unless requested otherwise). Some Cave Bear pickups are displayedāthe latest in the companyās 10-humbucker line. And the last step is final assembly for Dunableās roughly 50 guitars shipped per month, and includes custom setup if requested. As the video concludes, Dunable talks about his Southeast Asia-made, lower-priced DE Series, which are setup, tested, and quality checked at the L.A. shop before leaving for stores and individual owners.