T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3073.2 | The nose knows. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Thu Apr 20 1995 11:18 | 41 |
|
Many of the guitars I've bought at flea markets have had a very strong
musty smell, obviously from sitting in an attic. When they are
hollow-body guitars, it is very difficult to get rid of. I've even
gone as far as emptying an entire can of lysol into one guitar.
I was concerned that the chemicals in the Lysol might harm the
guitar but it hasn't affected it. The guitars I've done this to
have mainly been Harmony's and other budget models. I don't think
I could bring myself to do this to an expensive instrument, but
a musty smell is a really hard thing to ignore. In most cases,
expensive instuments are well cared for, and it's the budget models
that get neglected and stuffed in an attic. I had a chance to buy
a Rickenbacker Electro Lap steel (bakelite) last year. The case
had the most ungodly stink to it. If I bought it, I think I would
have started by filling the case with baking soda, and leave it
sit for a few weeks. Then I would clean it out with rug shampoo.
The steel also had the same stink, but I would think a solid body
instrument would be easy to clean and eliminate an odor from.
I've read articles in Guitar Player where they referred to the
wonderful smell of nitro-cellulous lacquer on a new Fender Strat.
I've sprayed nitro-cellulous lacquer and can testify that it is
very nasty stuff to work with and the fumes are quite toxic.
Respirators that are suitable for organic vapors are required.
I'm not sure if they become inert once they cure, but if you can
smell the finish, it must be somewhat volatile still. Nitro-cellulous
takes forever to cure, in fact, I don't think it ever cures 100%.
If you spray naptha, or other solvents on nitro-cellulous lacquer,
the finish will "reflow". This does not occur with acrylic-based
materials. Once polyurethane cures, it cannot be reflowed. This has
a lot to do with the smell you get from some instruments and not
from others.
One of the nastiest smells us musicians may ever encounter is the
smell of capacitors, transformers, or other electronic components
failing in an amplifier. A friend of mine experienced this with a
Vox AC30 one night, and we had to clear out the studio. The smell
lasted for weeks.
Mark
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3073.3 | Cases stink, too | GOES11::LAMBERT | Sam, Storage Mgmt. S/W @CXO | Thu Apr 20 1995 11:45 | 16 |
| re: .2
> One of the nastiest smells us musicians may ever encounter is the
> smell of capacitors, transformers, or other electronic components
> failing in an amplifier.
Actually, some of the nastiest smells I've ever encountered have been the
patrons in the bars I'm playing in. :-)
I had a '30s Gibson archtop acoustic that smelled pretty bad. I also own
two guitar *cases* that I can't get the glue stink out of. My Ibanez bass
case has a strong acetone-type smell. Pretty rank. And my old Guild case
from 1976 or so still smells of glue.
-- Sam
|
3073.4 | Fresh! | SALEM::DACUNHA | | Thu Apr 20 1995 11:50 | 10 |
|
Having kicked the habit 1.5 years ago.....
Theres nothing like waking up in the morning and smelling
the clothes you wore the night before to a jam at a
sweaty, smokey barroom..
hurl city
|
3073.5 | | GOES11::LAMBERT | Sam, Storage Mgmt. S/W @CXO | Thu Apr 20 1995 11:55 | 7 |
| re: .4
Oh, I even got in the habit of taking a shower when I got home to get rid
of that. Yeah, even if it's 3am, it's better than waking up to that stink.
-- Sam
|
3073.6 | | MADMXX::KNOX | Rock'n'Roll Refugee | Thu Apr 20 1995 11:59 | 15 |
|
Most of my basses smell like stale cigarettes and beer (as do most
of my cabs, rack, etc.) If I leave my gear locked up in my truck
over night, the odor the next day is more than a bit pungent.
However, I do have a Guild FC-45E acoustic/electric guitar that
does have a subtle but very pleasant fragrance to the wood. I don't use
this beauty in clubs, so it isn't permeated with bar-spunk. I don't
use a lot of guit-cleaner or oils on it, I just try keep it clean
and dust-free.
/Bill_K
PS - I think it was Coop that brought up the "smell-thang" first
|
3073.7 | warning: smoking may be hazardous to your axe | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Thu Apr 20 1995 12:28 | 14 |
| Cigarette smoke is a serious issue with musical equipment. It
is brutal on any kind of electronic equipment. Most of the people
I know that have a studio do not allow smoking in their studios.
According to Willie G Mosely, cigarette smoke can greatly affect
the value of a vintage guitar. There are many collectors/traders
that will not touch an instrument that has been exposed to large
doses of cigarette smoke.
I'm not quite that fussy (can't really afford to be). I figure most
anything can be cleaned off with enough elbow grease, and a little
McGuires Mirrorglaze.
Mark
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3073.8 | | MADMXX::KNOX | Rock'n'Roll Refugee | Thu Apr 20 1995 13:18 | 13 |
|
What really soaks up the bar-spunk odors is the dura-tuff
fuzzy carpet stuff that covers speaker cabs, rack, etc.
There is no way to get the stink out (maybe the wet-vac???)
Also, the paper cones in speakers soaks up the bar-spunk
as well (probably shouldn't try to use the wet-vac on these!!)
As far as coming home after a gig with stale smoke and booze
stench... It's either shower at 3am or sleep in the basement
bedroom *alone*... an easy choice!!
/Billy_K
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3073.9 | | MSBCS::EVANS | | Thu Apr 20 1995 14:30 | 7 |
| The best guitar smell for me comes from the soundhole of a new rosewood
acoustic. I'd like to be in a mill sometime when they were cutting the
rosewood for backs and sides. My guitar is about 5 years old and still
has the rosewood smell - don't know how long it will last.
Jim
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3073.10 | | JARETH::KMCDONOUGH | SET KIDS/NOSICK | Thu Apr 20 1995 15:40 | 8 |
|
When I open the case of my '74 Paul, I smell a serious case of "Been
there, done that."
It's been around, and I can tell. 8-)
|
3073.11 | Try this for stinking cases.... | USCTR1::bflat5.mlo.dec.com::SalesRepresentative | | Fri Apr 21 1995 09:35 | 18 |
| A cure for rancid smoke drenched guitar cases, and guitars in
some instances,, is to put a fresh car-deodorizer in the case..
use it the same way you'd use it in a car. open a it a little
at a time...
I cured my 78 Alvarez of it's stale cigarette smoke smell with a
few months of keeping a vanilla airfreshener in the
accessory case.. (the little treetype you put in your car.)
It's not the same as the odor the base note desribes.. but
it sure beat the smell of that case and guitar when I bought it.
It would literally stink the room up as soon as the case
was opened.. I love the guitar, but I wouldn't want the
previous owners lungs!
I also had a candian made fender strat style case that had an
awfull glue smell in it.. again, cured with an air freshner
for a few months, and a few baking soda dousings...
|
3073.12 | Take time to stop and smell the rosewood | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Fri Apr 21 1995 11:13 | 16 |
| I second the nomination for rosewood guitars. I love opening up my
guitar case and cathing a whiff of that wonderful scent...
My OM-28 smells best, but the HD-28 still smell great too. I like the
smell of my mahogany guitars also, but rosewood is the best.
My Strat can't compete in the fragrance department.
Although I'm generally a Martin fan, I must admit that Taylor makes
some of the best smelling new guitars.
New acoustics smell best, but the four-year-old HD-28 is still smells
great. I use soundhole cover humidifiers. Maybe this helps keep the
scent from fading.
Jim
|
3073.13 | Ahhh,guitar smells !! | KIRKTN::JHYNDMAN | | Thu May 04 1995 03:45 | 12 |
| While I was in Austin last week, I managed to arrange a tour of the
Collings guitar factory......talk about rosewood smells !!!!
They were planing some Brazilian blanks for a special order
Dreadnought, and the fragrance was superb.
A friend of mine owns a 1922 0028, and you can still smell the
rosewood.
My Strat still smells faintly from the beer that spilled into the
case around 10 years ago.
Jim.
|
3073.14 | Sticky Sweet | SALEM::DACUNHA | | Thu May 04 1995 10:48 | 12 |
|
Back in the mid-eighties, I bought a Kramer Americana and
probably paid too much. BUT One thing I remember about this guitar
was the distinct---
CHOCOLATE smell of the case. Evertime I opened it, I
expected the guit to be sticky and gooey with the sweet stuff.
Kinda gave me the woolies.
CMD
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3073.15 | mmmmmm... | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Fri May 05 1995 07:43 | 3 |
| My Strat smells like chocolate too. I love it.
-kev
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