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coastie72

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Joined
Aug 23, 2009
Messages
138
Location
Columbia SC
I have been told by many that they use automotive type wax on guitars and basses? I actually seen one luthier use a past wax on an old discolored Fender guitar, Telecaster, and it looked great afterwards. Does anyone want to share their thoughts or facts on this? :confused:
 

mynan

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Feb 25, 2007
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Location
Spring Lake, MI
Maybe if I was going to leave it outside for a few days, but since it's inside most of the time Wonder Wipes do the job nicely.
 

agplate

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Jan 5, 2005
Messages
143
I've been known to use Mequire's No. 7 Show Car Glaze (my technique) as a light polish with a finish of Turtle Wax (green bottle/white cap) diluted with water (a Rickenbacker factory technique). The Glaze will take out alot of fine scratches and really shine the finish, while the wax is a gentle finish. You may not wish to wax the back of the bass too much, as it will really slide around on your belly for a while.

I've never had any problems with this process on any bass with a painted/clearcoat finish. Probably wouldn't be too good on my Stealth though...
 

Caca de Kick

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Sep 29, 2006
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1,363
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South Seattle
I always use Meguires hightech yellow. It works beautifully in restoring the gloss in old basses, and I also use it after refinish jobs when I'm polishing it to a gloss.
 

Powman

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Jul 30, 2009
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1,086
Location
Oakville, Ontario, Canada
Would it not be safer to use products specifically designed for guitars? I use the Gibson guitar polish. Seems to work well.

For the unfinished maple neck I ordered gunstock oil from Cabela's.
 

Ben Esparza

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Joined
May 3, 2007
Messages
22
Location
Pico Rivera, CA
I met a guy 30+ years ago that used Armour All for the body and motor oil for the fingerboard! I never saw the bass, but I'm sure it's probably a toxic dump by now.
 

jd_elam

Active member
Joined
May 26, 2009
Messages
40
Location
Alabama
I met a guy 30+ years ago that used Armour All for the body and motor oil for the fingerboard! I never saw the bass, but I'm sure it's probably a toxic dump by now.

I used to know a guy that used WD40 to clean his strings after he played. He would just spray them down, fingerboard and all.

He just couldn't understand why the lacquer was coming off the neck!
 

mmbassplayer

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Jul 6, 2008
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1,142
Location
Honolulu, HI
Sounds like a party, was it synthetic or fossil motor oil? What viscosity?

A few years back when my father made custom drums, he finished a red oak snare with motor oil... 10w30 to be exact. As he told us it was a method he learned in 7th grade woodshop. Drum ended up looking great and polishing to a mirrorlike shine. Looking for a picture of it now. JOSH
 

AtomicPunk

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Joined
Oct 23, 2007
Messages
250
Location
Detroit Suburbs, MI
Will this remove a filmy kind of haze from nitrocellulose? If so, what's the process? Thanks in advance for your reply.

Here is the regimen I use.
1. Anytime it's the first time you're doing a particular instrument. Anytime the instrument has fine scratches, swirl marks, etc. use the Scratch-x, then Zymol. Zymol is a wax and Scratch-x is a cleaner. Clean it, then wax it.
Scratch-x has a tiny amount of abrasive material in it that takes out scratches and swirls in the finish as well as any sweat, etc.
Be careful not to get it on the control knobs, etc. I use a cloth diaper.

2. Apply and rub hard. Support the guitar on a flat surface which is also covered in soft cloths. Keep rubbing until the compound has broken down and dried, or until you can feel that it's stopped working. Then renew and start again. STAY AWAY FROM SHARP EDGES AND CORNERS with the abrasive compounds. Do 2 square inches with Scratch-X, and an area abut 4" X 4" with the Zymol. Zymol should be put on sparingly; you can mist on some water to help buff it. It is not necessary to wait for it to dry.

3. Don't be nervous. The most important thing if you are nervous, is not to stray from the prescribed regimen. It is most important that the cloth is absolutely soft and clean. The tiniest bit o' grit will cause heartaches. You'll develop a feel.

Soon you will have a shiny guitar that smells like a daquiri. Your case will love it when you put it in.
 
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