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fireheart7

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2014
Messages
11
Hi everyone,

I just bought a used Sterling AX4. It has a significant chip on its quilt veneer top.

Any suggestions other than taking to a luthier? I paid under 100 bucks for the thing, lol. So what would you do?
Any pointers?
 

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BrickGlass

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
845
Location
Utah
That would be a luthier job as far as I can tell. I've had chips repaired and students that have had terrible chips repaired. It's fixable to a certain extent for sure. Just a matter of finding the right repair person.
 

Fro

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 17, 2012
Messages
782
For a $100 guitar I'd either:
1. Grab some fingernail polish and touch it up.
2. Try to chip all of the finish off of the top and go all natural, or
3. Nothing. Personally I probably wouldn't do anything but play it.
 

fireheart7

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2014
Messages
11
For a $100 guitar I'd either:
1. Grab some fingernail polish and touch it up.
2. Try to chip all of the finish off of the top and go all natural, or
3. Nothing. Personally I probably wouldn't do anything but play it.

Makes sense. Thanks
 

Wahoonc

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Joined
May 29, 2014
Messages
448
Location
D.C.
Duck tape, for sure. Then scrawl a random date on it with a zodiac sign to make people wonder. Happy playing!
 

Awhitlock

Well-known member
Joined
May 3, 2019
Messages
54
Looks like a good relic job
.... Haha. They are very fashionable at the moment.

But more seriously, I personally dont see a problem with it. You paid 100 for a great guitar and it wont affect how it sounds/plays. Just have fun with it and you can relax about future dings.
 

fireheart7

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2014
Messages
11
Looks like a good relic job
.... Haha. They are very fashionable at the moment.

But more seriously, I personally dont see a problem with it. You paid 100 for a great guitar and it wont affect how it sounds/plays. Just have fun with it and you can relax about future dings.
Makes sense to me.
 

spychocyco

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 16, 2008
Messages
800
For a $100 guitar, I'd leave it as is. It would probably cost more than you paid for the guitar to repair it properly.
 

fireheart7

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2014
Messages
11
Update:
Got the guitar for my 12 yr. old son. Used it as a project for him to learn to restring, clean the neck, set the tremolo, set intonation. The action was spot on so no need to work there. I am amazed at the quality of the neck, it is flawless! All frets leveled, stable as heck. It held tuning quicker than other more pricier instruments.
The pickups sound good.
The weak spot is the trem bar. It has a significant amount of lag, not good enough if you know better. For a beginner, best beginner guitar by far. I could gig with it, just not use the trem bar, lol.

...and he just covered the chip with an Avengers sticker.

Now I really want one for me.
Wish they had a Sterling Reflex...:D
 
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