I really love the neck on my Axis, and wish all my guitar necks were this smooth.
A few nights ago I noticed a sticky spot on my Squier tele and while I was trying to wipe it off, the finish started peeling away.
PERFECT! Now I had an excuse to try the oil/wax treatment on it! Last night I removed the neck, sanded off the old finish (this took about 30 seconds, since it was so thin), and applied one coat of the birchwood Casey oil. I finished off with a coat of wax, put the neck back on and re-strung.
Now it is totally smooth and ready to rock! I don't think I'd do this on an expensive piece, but the tele is my token "project" guitar. Over the years, I have put on Duncan pickups (a Lil' 59 and a vintage rhythm stack) and a fishman powerbridge. I have the pickups wired to a 5-way switch that gives me 4 combinations --the regular 3 tele sounds, single coil bridge, plus an "off" setting for quick silence.
It's no Axis, but I have learned a lot about guitar maintenance and repair by messing with it, and now it plays better than ever.
Daggo
A few nights ago I noticed a sticky spot on my Squier tele and while I was trying to wipe it off, the finish started peeling away.
PERFECT! Now I had an excuse to try the oil/wax treatment on it! Last night I removed the neck, sanded off the old finish (this took about 30 seconds, since it was so thin), and applied one coat of the birchwood Casey oil. I finished off with a coat of wax, put the neck back on and re-strung.
Now it is totally smooth and ready to rock! I don't think I'd do this on an expensive piece, but the tele is my token "project" guitar. Over the years, I have put on Duncan pickups (a Lil' 59 and a vintage rhythm stack) and a fishman powerbridge. I have the pickups wired to a 5-way switch that gives me 4 combinations --the regular 3 tele sounds, single coil bridge, plus an "off" setting for quick silence.
It's no Axis, but I have learned a lot about guitar maintenance and repair by messing with it, and now it plays better than ever.
Daggo