T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1778.1 | I use a belt sander ... | ASAHI::SCARY | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Thu Apr 12 1990 05:10 | 7 |
| I use Windex on mine - doesn't leave an oily film like a polish does so
finger prints aren't quite as bad. BUT, my Kramer has a black finish so
finger prints will always be there. I could shine my Strat with
sandpaper and no one could tell ...
Scary
|
1778.2 | cleaning the fretboard ... | GOOROO::CLARK | Ivana had my love child! | Thu Apr 12 1990 09:32 | 12 |
| I usually just wipe 'em down with a polishing cloth. I'm not too
particular about looks.
But, cleaning the fingerboard, that's a different story. I was
getting sick of the way my Strat was feeling (especially compared
with the feel of somebody's new maple neck Tele, no names mentioned).
I took the strings off, went over the entire fingerboard with #0000
steel wool (using a fair amount of pressure), then wiped the finger-
board down with a paper towel sprayed with a little Murphy's Oil Soap,
then polished it with a dry paper towel. THen I put new strings on.
What an amazing difference!!!
|
1778.3 | Tres Amigo | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Thu Apr 12 1990 09:51 | 43 |
| Windex?.....Ouch ! I would stay away from windex as it contains
ammonia, and other strong detergents that can dry out the wood,
and harm the finish.
The best way to care for guitars and other wooden musical instruments,
is with a Tres Amigo kit. The kit contains a bottle of pure lemon oil
(with no other additives) and pure carnuba wax, (with no additives like
silicon or bee's wax).
First you clean the guitar with lemon oil. Even with lacquer, instruments
are still quite porous. Lemon oil is absorbed into the wood and
moisturizes it as it cleans. It displaces any other moisture (ie water)
from the wood. Lemon oil is excellant for rosewood or ebony fretboards.
I use it liberally, sometimes applying a heavy coat to the fretboard
and leave it on overnight, then wipe the residue off the next day. I
find I never have to use anything like Fast-Fret, or Finger-Ease when
the fretboard is well oiled with Lemon oil. I find, if you get a clean
dry cloth, and saturate it with lemon oil, then place the cloth in a
zip-lock bag after each use, it provides a good cleaning cloth you can
reuse anytime to wipe smudges, or clean the neck.
The carnuba wax is applied like car wax. You rub it in, allow to dry
to a white residue, then wipe it clean. Don't wax the fretboard unless
it is a lacquered board like a maple Fender neck.
This kit does a beautiful job, but obviously takes a bit longer than
using aerosol polish. I generally use the Tres Amigo kits each time
I do a string change. I find that you go through a lot more lemon oil
than you do carnuba wax. The kit contains equal portions of both. Tres
Amigo also sells large 16 oz. bottles of lemon oil. Tres Amigo kits sell
for about $4.00, and the 16 oz. bottles of lemon oil are about $6.00.
If your guitar includes any brass parts, it is often necessary to
remove tarnish from the finish. You could use products like Brasso to
clean these parts, but they are rather harsh, and if you spill them on
wooden surfaces, they dull the finish. I have found that baking soda
and water works just as well, and does not effect wooden finishes
like brass cleaners.
Check it out. Use it once, and I guarentee, you'll be hooked.
Mark Jacques
|
1778.4 | what do you think? | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Thu Apr 12 1990 10:24 | 10 |
| Only thing is, I read that it's *very* much more hard work to
refinish a guitar that's had wax/oil used on the painted bits. As you
say, it gets through the finish into the wood and has to be got back
out again if a new lasting finish is to be applied.
I don't know how much of this is rubbish, of course. People who
refinish guitars have a vested interest in persuading you not to
look after the original finish!
Richard.
|
1778.5 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Thu Apr 12 1990 10:34 | 5 |
| I use SIT guitar polish, because I gave cans of this stuff to all my guitarist
friends a couple of years ago for Xmas and the stuff mysteriously founds it's
way back into my guitar case... ;)
jc (Who doesn't polish much but wipes his neck off)
|
1778.6 | lemon oil vs silicon | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Thu Apr 12 1990 12:28 | 35 |
| I'm no expert on refinishing, but I have done lot's of wooden furniture
and a couple of guitars. Before refinishing, you generally have to
strip the old finish first. There are several ways to do this, but
I find the best way is to use Formby's furniture refinisher. The
methods that I would not use include using stripease (with a scraper),
heat stripers, or actually sanding the old finish off. All these
methods can damage the wood. Formby's furniture refinisher softens
the old finish just enough to allow you to remove it with a fine
steelwool. It is so mild, that I have used it without gloves, and it
doesn't irritate my skin very much. It does however contain naptha
which has a tendency to dry out the wood. Even if an item has been
well oiled with lemon oil for years, the naptha tends to leave the
wood dried out. You should have no problem applying a new finish
once the old finish is removed. Once the new finish is completely
cured, you should begin treating it with lemon oil regularly. If
you don't treat it with lemon oil, the wood will absorb water from
the air.
I would agree that using anything other than lemon oil and carnuba wax
would tend to leave a lot of residue that is not good for the wood, and
looks unsightly. Silicon is perhaps one of the worst things you can use
on wood (IMHO). I know a guy that owns a furniture factory, and his worst
fear is getting saw blades and other tools that have been coated with
silicon. Once the silicon gets onto the surface of untreated wood, there
is virtually no way of salvaging the wood. The wood will not take a stain
or varnish, and there is no way to remove it. It is also very difficult
to remove from saw blades and tools. He uses a solution to clean new
blades before they are used and it takes several applications to remove
all the silicon before he will use them in his shop. If a blade coated
with silicon is used, it get's onto the wood, and is spread to the saw
table, and throughout his shop, causing mega problems.
In other words, don't use any polishes that contain silicon.
Mark
|
1778.7 | | NEEPS::IRVINE | I think therefor I gotta headache | Thu Apr 12 1990 13:08 | 16 |
| Well I have never seen the TRES AMIGO KIT in the UK, but I do use
the lemon oil...
I am glad to here that I will not have damaged the finish on my
LP. Do LP's have a lacquered finish, or are they polished (my LP
is a `89 model so only cost around �800 but is now almost �1000).
If the use of a polish could cause probs, should I only buy the
Gibson polish?
And last of all are there any ingredients in FAST FRET that could
harm the finish on the neck, as I have found that with new FAST
FRET sticks, there tends to be an oily residue on the back of the
neck, which I wipe of after applying?
Bob
|
1778.8 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Thu Apr 12 1990 14:00 | 3 |
| Noticed Kramer polish in a store and it's ingrediants were alcohol and
water, so I tried mixing up some and it cleans good. I don't like wax
too much.
|
1778.9 | Cleanliness is next to Slowhandedness | STAR::DONOVAN | | Thu Apr 12 1990 14:08 | 36 |
|
I have been using the Martin pump-bottle polish for quite a while
on a Fender Strat and it seems to work very well. Also, using a
trick from Stanley Clarke printed in an old issue of GUITAR PLAYER,
I wipe down the strings with after shave, being very careful, of
course, not to get any on the finish.
Stanley, I believe, used Aqua Velva. I kind of base it on the
place we're playing...Old Spice for the dives, Brute for the
high schools, Polo for the more upscale place...okay, okay, it's
joke! Seriously, I just buy a couple of those "trial-size" aftershaves
and keep them in the pocket of my guitar case.
Given the smoky atmosphere of the place we play in, and its tendency
to dry the neck and the strings, I always carry a can of Finger
Ease with me, too. The sales guy at a rather well-known, paternally-named
music store told me Finger Ease would remove the finish from my guitar.
After 8 years, I see no evidence of that!
There does seem to be a snob-thing with some players about using it,
though. Some guys say, rather disdainfully, "I can't believe you use
that stuff."
Anyhow, back to the subject at hand: In a pinch, I've used Lemon
Pledge. I don't know if this a bad idea or not. All I know is that
I hate the terrible smell of my guitar come Sunday morning. Frequent
cleaning seems to be a necessary evil.
Brian
P.S.
Where in the local (MA) area is the TRES AMIGO kit for sale? I'd
like to try that.
|
1778.10 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | It's great to be a turtle! | Fri Apr 13 1990 09:19 | 22 |
| The Tres Amigos stuff is really good.
I had a 16 oz. bottle of lemon oil, lasted me for a few years. I've never
replenished with that, but I found some pure lemon oil distributed
by Pledge Inc. The ingredients seem pretty simple. Lemon oil, distilled
water, so I've been using that.
Be REAL carefull of the AMONIA stuff...
For stings, I just use a gotten rag and a dab of Isopropyl Alchohol.
Wipe em down a few times... taking care not to get too much on the
fret board.
Another thing that I do now and then..
about one every two months, I'll take all the stings off, instead of chaning
them one at a time, get a small cup file it with alchohol, and get a soft tooth
brush. I Cover the body with a cotten rag, and using the tooth brush, I clean
out the nooks and cranneys of the bridge, blowing all residue out after that
with compressed air. Brings a lot of brilliance back into the tone once
the sledge and dust is out-a-there. Try it sometime. I find it does bring
back some tone..
|
1778.11 | MacDuff's has Tres Amigo | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Tue Apr 17 1990 12:02 | 19 |
| Tres Amigo products are available from MacDuff's Music on route 9
in Shrewsbury (between Spags and Leiser).
Again, I would avoid using water, alcohol, *ammonia*, **silicon**, or
materials with unknown elements on wood. I believe finger ease contins
silicon and therefore should be avoided. I have used Fast-Fret and it
seems to be quite inert, but it tends to leave a residue that has to
be removed, so I prefer to avoid this too. If you lube the fingerboard
with plenty of lemon oil, you shouldn't need anything else. You really
can't over-apply lemon oil, as the wood will only absorb what it can
hold. The rest will remain on the surface, and can easily be wiped
away. Someone mentioned lemon oil from Pledge. I would read the label,
and make sure it is 100% pure lemon oil. If it containes anything else,
avoid using it.
Why gamble with solutions with unknown side effects, when you can use
something that is a sure bet ??
Mark
|
1778.12 | Lemon Oil question | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Tue Apr 17 1990 12:12 | 10 |
|
Mark, I've got a Lemon Oil question?? Sounds like a daytime TV
soap advertisement, huh?? Anyway, I read a while back here that Lemon
Oil was a no-no cause it caused the wood to shrink around the frets or
some such thing?? Have you ever heard of that?? Will the person who
said it refresh my memory??
Regards,
Steve
|
1778.13 | Not that I know of. | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Wed Apr 18 1990 10:00 | 19 |
| I'm no expert, but in my mind, when wood absorbs any kind of moisture
it tends to swell if anything, not shrink. As wood drys out, it shrinks.
I have never heard of any bad side effects from using pure lemon oil.
Think of wood as a sponge. When you wet a sponge, it swells and becomes
very heavy. When you squeeze the water out of a sponge, it shrinks,
and becomes much lighter. When a dry sponge comes in contact with any
kind of moisture it will draw the moisture in until it becomes fully
saturated. Once saturated, the sponge will not absorb any more water.
Untreated (dry) wood will also absorb any moisture it comes in contact
with. Wood treated with any kind of oil will not absorb *any* moisture.
Many oils, however, have a detrimental effect on wood. Lemon oil is
considered to be the best thing to use on wood because it is inert,
and it drys fully, leaving no sticky residue.
All I can say is if you have never used Tres Amigo cleaning kits,
you owe it to yourself (and your guitar) to try it at least once.
Mark
|
1778.14 | | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Mon Apr 23 1990 16:39 | 10 |
|
Thanks, Mark... yep, I HAVE used tres amigoes cleaning stuff, as a
matter of fact I use the lemon oil to clean up the guck that gets left
behind by the masking tape, when I do a fret job... works like a champ,
I just got a little concerned when I read that other note... Hmmmmmm
can't even find the damn thing now, maybe it was some kind of ugly
flashback ;^)
|
1778.15 | | SMURF::LAMBERT | The Delicate Sound of Thunder | Mon Apr 23 1990 18:58 | 8 |
| I think the note you're referencing was in a discussion about cleaning
_fretboards_. It was "noted" (har, har) that if you use too much oil on
a rosewood board (in particular) it *could* swell the wood to the point
of having an effect on the frets. It was also noted that you shouldn't
use lemon oil on a fretboard because it can interact with finger oils
and produce a really bad smell.
-- Sam
|
1778.17 | no oils | TOOTER::WEBER | | Tue Apr 24 1990 10:04 | 23 |
| No repair person, manufacturer or luthier I have ever dealt with
recommends oiling lacquer-finished guitars. In fact, a number of them
(including Roger Borys, Bob Benedetto, & Jimmy D'Aquisto) are strongly
against using anything except a soft cloth for normal maintenance.
John Carruther's columns in the Oct & Nov 1978 issues of GP explain how
to maintain any type of finish. He says not to use any oils on a
guitar, even on the fretboard.
While a case can be made for minimal fretboard oiling, none can be made
for oiling a lacquer-finished body or neck. Over the years, excess oil
dulls the tone, can loosen binding and can actually cause deterioration
of the wood. It may make the guitar look shiny, but it is in fact
detrimental to the long-term health of the instrument.
Wiping the guitar with a a soft cloth after using, and occasional
waxing (I use either Gibson or Martin liquids, sometime Pledge on the
neck) is all that a guitar should ever need. Really bad deposits can be
removed with mineral spirits or the appropriate grade of Meguiras
polishing compound, followed by their sealer and some wax.
Danny W.
|
1778.19 | | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Tue Apr 24 1990 10:30 | 8 |
|
Yeah, I only use it on rosewood fingerboards... I never though that
it made sense to use oil over laquer, cos I could never figure out how
it could get through to the wood underneath... course my (ahem) new
strat has a maple neck.. so I'll be out of the oilin' business all
together. ;^)
|
1778.20 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Tue Apr 24 1990 13:18 | 9 |
| My kramer felt bad so I washed it in the tub with alot of water and
alcohol. Used a finger brush for the rosewood.
Liked the effect so did it inside of the jazz guitar I bought used
because it smelled like perfume. Let it dry in the sun.
The instruments are better to play for me, but I do like to wax every
5 years or so. Vegitable oil removes Surfer Stickers and the like.
|
1778.21 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Tue Apr 24 1990 13:40 | 5 |
| Like Wow dude...
Can you get me some of that stuff ?
;)
|
1778.22 | Quality Polishes? | NEST::CURRY | | Thu Apr 28 1994 15:55 | 7 |
| Since noone has mentioned it to date, I might as well be the first;
What guitar polish do you find to be the best? I know that there are
several different brands on the market. Do you find that there are
any in particular that do a better job than most at keeping the finish
on your axe nice and shiney? Better for protection?
Mike
|
1778.23 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu Apr 28 1994 17:27 | 7 |
| I use that Tres Amigos stuff when I bother to do it. The carneuba(sp)
wax is kind of a pain to get buffed out, but once it's done, it resists
fingerprints and stuff very well.
Buck just uses Pledge...
Greg
|
1778.24 | short and sweet | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | There's room for you inside | Fri Apr 29 1994 00:04 | 5 |
|
Martin Guitar Polish.
P.K.
|
1778.25 | Pledge........lemon | NAVY5::SDANDREA | I got yer huckleberry... | Fri Apr 29 1994 08:22 | 1 |
|
|
1778.26 | | E::EVANS | | Fri Apr 29 1994 08:31 | 6 |
|
ditto - Martin Guitar Polish
Jim
|
1778.27 | One more time | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Apr 29 1994 09:05 | 18 |
| >Since noone has mentioned it to date, I might as well be the first;<
You're kidding, right? See .17, as well as the many other notes
scattered throughout the conference on this subject.
Martin and Gibson polishes both work well. The Martin is a little
thinner. I prefer it on flattops. I use the Gibson polish on most of my
guitars, though. And there's nothing wrong with Lemon Pledge for
virtually any solidbody.
I find myself repeating this over and over, and now seems alike a good time
to say it once again-use a clean chamois or flannelette to clean your
guitar after every use and don't use polish too often. My Martin and
Gibson bottles are still half full and I've had them forever and I've owned
a lot of guitars. Unless you leave your guitar out in the rain, it
really doesn't need to be waxed.
Danny W.
|
1778.28 | depends on what you're polishing... | POWDML::BUCKLEY | Raptor -- Rules the Skies! | Fri Apr 29 1994 10:21 | 5 |
| RE: Glh
Yeah, I use Pledge -- but, since all my guitars have a solid color
finish, what's the difference?!? If I had a wood-grained guitar,
I would use something *nice*.
|
1778.29 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Fri Apr 29 1994 10:23 | 4 |
| re: Buckmonster
I hear it works good on strings too...
;^)
|
1778.30 | Another voice | RANGER::WEBER | | Thu May 12 1994 12:46 | 14 |
| Those of you who are still uncomfortable about not waxing your guitar
every chance you get should read the column in Acoustic Guitar Magazine
May/June 1994, which points out that the guitar's finish provides all
the protection the guitar needs. It starts off:
"Don't oil or wax your guitar! There are no oiling regimens that must
be followed. Wood is dead, mummified tissue. It doesn't "breathe" or
have to be "fed" in any way. Wood doesn't "starve" for oil and it won't
crack, shrivel or die if you neglect to apply the correct commercial
polish, oil, cream, lotion or was at the proper intervals."
Remember, kiddies, you heard it here first.
Danny W.
|
1778.31 | | E::EVANS | | Thu May 12 1994 13:52 | 7 |
|
The only caveat I would add to what Danny said would be that the wood in
acoustic guitars can dry out. You should take steps to prevent this by
keeping it in a case when not in use and using a Damp-It or other humidifier.
Jim
|
1778.32 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | relative moralist | Thu May 12 1994 14:25 | 6 |
| I never wax or oil my guitars anyway. If one gets dirty, I just wipe it off
with a clean rag - very slightly damp, if necessary. It's a policy instituted
out of sheer laziness and continued because it seems to work (and I'm still
lazy).
Bob
|
1778.33 | hum, maybe I can clean my amp this way | ADROID::foster | Fight the good fight | Fri May 13 1994 07:49 | 4 |
| I'm lazy too, so I just dunk it in the bathtub and towel it down
after.
Droid
|
1778.34 | %^) | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Fri May 13 1994 08:30 | 4 |
|
I polish all my Spanish guitars with Oil of Ol� (tm).
Raoul
|
1778.35 | | LEDS::BURATI | Kiss my monkey | Fri May 13 1994 08:46 | 1 |
| <- :*)
|
1778.36 | Should I spray the INSIDE with pledge ? (-: | NOTAPC::BURGESS | | Fri May 13 1994 10:04 | 20 |
| re <<< Note 1778.31 by E::EVANS >>>
> The only caveat I would add to what Danny said would be that the wood in
> acoustic guitars can dry out. You should take steps to prevent this by
> keeping it in a case when not in use and using a Damp-It or other humidifier.
Right. But does it dry out from the inside ? The outside
typically has a hard and probably impervious finish to it {except
mahogany instruments} but the inside looks to be more like "bare
wood". Is it "bare wood" or is it somehow 'sealed' to ensure that the
wood absorbs/gives_up moisture at the same rate from each side of the
wood ? This is a fairly standard practice in cabinet making.
> Jim
Reg
|
1778.37 | humidity | TOOTER::WEBER | | Fri May 13 1994 11:10 | 6 |
| The inside is bare wood. Always maintain the proper humidity. I use
Herco Guard-Fathers in my acoustic guitars and keep the house
humidified in Winter. I don't worry about the solids and semi's and
they seem to have survived on their own.
Danny W.
|
1778.38 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Fri May 13 1994 11:35 | 7 |
| > The inside is bare wood.
Not strictly true. The inside of my Alvarez-Yairi DY-50 has a finish
on it. It's not the heavy glossy finish that's on the outside, but
there is some sort of finish there.
Greg
|
1778.39 | whutizzit? | MILKWY::WAGNER | Scott | Fri May 13 1994 11:56 | 4 |
|
But but, is it water that's leaving the wood, or oil? Or both?
Scott
|
1778.40 | Every 3000 miles | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Fri May 13 1994 12:21 | 6 |
| Oil. I drain the oil from my car into the soundhole of my acoustic
when I have to change it to prevent this from happening. Keeps the
guitar sounding great, and saves me the cost of one of those little
pans to drain the stuff into.
Greg
|
1778.41 | The inside is usually bare wood | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri May 13 1994 12:25 | 11 |
| I'd be tempted to say the inside of *fine* guitars is bare wood, but I
won't. (I know, I already did. The jury is instructed to ignore that
remark.)
Most guitars makers do not put a finish on the inside of their guitars.
It is generally thought that will age better if the inside is
untreated, and many luthiers claim that putting any finish on the
inside is detrimental to tone. There is a dissenting school of thought,
but the vast majority of guitars I've seen have bare insides.
Danny W.
|
1778.42 | | LEDS::ORSI | Kinfolk said..move away from there | Fri May 13 1994 12:28 | 7 |
| > but the vast majority of guitars I've seen have bare insides.
Yabbut Danny, the pickup routes on my Strat AND my Les Paul were
finished. %^) %^)
Neal
|
1778.43 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | relative moralist | Fri May 13 1994 16:20 | 5 |
| My Kohno classical (worth a couple grand) has a thin coat of varnish on the
inside (or maybe it's the beer I spilled in it at one of those rowdy classical
jams), but my wife's Alvarez Yairi is bare inside.
Bob
|
1778.44 | Gruhn Glaze | RANGER::WEBER | | Wed Jan 10 1996 12:37 | 33 |
| I always tell guitarists not to polish their guitars unless it needs
it, and point out that regularly wiping it down with a flannelette or
chamois eliminates the need for most polishing. However, there are
times when a guitar needs some finish clean up, for which I keep a
variety of grades of Meguires as well as both Gibson and Martin guitar
polishes and Lemon Pledge.
On my last visit to Gruhn Guitars, I got a complimentary bottle of
Gruhn Glaze, touted as an all purpose cleaner/polish. I've tried it on
a few guitars without any problems, but wasn't sure if it did anything
special.
I have a guitar with a very dark, hand-applied varnish sunburst that
looks like glass, but had an area of oxidation on the top, lower bout,
treble side where one's arm rests, and a smudge on the top next to the
fretboard extension. Neither of these would come off with the finest
grade of Meguires or regular polish, and I've been afraid to attack
them with anything more abrasive because the dark finish shows any
imperfection and is very delicate, so I've just ignored it for many
years.
I decided to try a couple of drops of Gruhn Glaze applied to
flannelette and rubbed out with a dry flannelette and chamois. Both
marks disappeared and after a week have not come back (some polishes
hide finish problems, which reappear after the polish rubs off). I'm
really impressed--this stuff seems better than anything else I've used.
If you try it, use it very sparingly, rub very lightly (it has a mild
amount of cut which might leave marks on some finishes if you use a
heavy hand) and keep dry buffing until it's gone.
Danny W.
|
1778.45 | | NETCAD::BUSENBARK | | Thu Jan 11 1996 07:06 | 27 |
| Danny,
A few months ago I used one of those Meguliars polishing substances
on an instrument which had lost it's shine due to the dirt on the instrument.
Martin polish did not help at all and actually the dirt/grime seemed to protect
the finish over the years. :^)
The first thing I noticed was the smell that this stuff put out and it reminded
me of car wax. Is this an petroleum based product? For some reason I seem to
remember that it wise to avoid using a petroleum based product on something
like this on an instrument.
It did do a really nice job and brought back a shine to the instrument
that was lost,however I seem to remember the smell and everytime your rubbed
against it,you heard this noise. Very similiar to car wax. Time seemed to
eliminate the plus I used some polish on it to try to get rid of the noise
and smell.
I recently have tried to get what seems to be a marks (circle)from a
small drop of water off a finish. Martin polish doesn't do the job,is this
what you removed with the "Gruhn" glaze polish? I also have some really fine
minor scratches I like to remove,any suggestions?
Rick
Rick
|
1778.46 | Gruhn Glaze | RANGER::WEBER | | Thu Jan 11 1996 08:12 | 16 |
| Rick:
They are in fact auto polishes but they have been long used by luthiers
and repairpersons for guitar work. Don't forget that many Fender and
Gibson colors are auto paints.
The Gruhn Glaze seems to do well on the kind of minor problems that are
too tough for plain polish, but too risky for serious attacking. I
don't know how well it removes scratches, but it works very well on the
whitish haze that sometimes develops from skin acids attacking the
finish, and seems to be a good balance between a polish and an abrasive
cleaner.
Danny W.
|