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Pimientito

Posts: 2481
Joined: Jul. 30 2007
From: Marbella

Best way to clean a fingerboard 

I thought Id post this in luthier section. When I change strings I normally clean the finger board of all the finger grease with a little furniture polish and then some fast fret. This tends to take away all the grease and dirt and leave a nice clean, slightly waxed fingerboard with shiny frets.

Recently I was asked to change strings on a friends guitar that had been sitting around for a a few years with the finger grease really dried on hard around the frets. I tried my usual trick of using polish and fast fret but no luck. The grease will come off if I scrape it but I dont want to scratch the fingerboard (which is ebony).

Is it better to try to scrape off the grease using a credit card for example or is it better to use a chemical cleaner. I have not attempted to use any alcohol based solution as yet.
Thanks. Pim.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 8:50:36
 
Doitsujin

Posts: 5078
Joined: Apr. 10 2005
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

Its like good barbecue... YOU NEVER CLEAN THE GRILL!

If you do..Swiss-knife...then alcohol +napkin. But,..I started washing my hands before playing :). yeah kind of odd..haha... bt that helps.. No more fingerboard cleaning needed since years.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 12:22:52
 
tele

Posts: 1464
Joined: Aug. 17 2012
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Doitsujin

dunlop lemon oil and a cloth. Easy

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 12:35:14
 
Anders Eliasson

Posts: 5780
Joined: Oct. 18 2006
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

Well, I scrape it of with a cabinet scraper and then continue with something more or less what you do

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 13:54:37
 
Pgh_flamenco

 

Posts: 1506
Joined: Dec. 5 2007
From: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

I use an old-fashioned razor--the kind that has a lip folded over one of the sides. I haven't found a cleaner that will remove this type of build-up without damaging the wood. From what I've read a lot of Ebony is dyed with leather dye due to the shortage of uniformly dark Ebony. So you have to be careful with solvents. If there is a difference in color (most likely it will be lighter in color) after you have scraped the wood you can apply Linseed oil or Fast Fret to darken it slightly. I haven't had any issues and the fb's I've done look great. Finally, I have sealed Rosewood wood with Tru-oil and that looks nice as well. It's more durable than Linseed oil, too.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 15:24:41
 
Leñador

Posts: 5237
Joined: Jun. 8 2012
From: Los Angeles

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

quote:

I started washing my hands before playing :)


Same here, though I forget when I come home drunk. I do still do a quick cleaning when I change strings but it's a big difference.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 15:28:17
 
bursche

Posts: 1182
Joined: Jul. 19 2007
From: Frankfurt, Germany

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Leñador

Once it's clean you can cover it with linen oil, let it dry for 24 hours, remove the excess oil and then polish with very fine grain (I used that micro mesh stuff last time). After that the fingerboard is pretty much like a teflon surface.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 16:42:24
 
estebanana

Posts: 9351
Joined: Oct. 16 2009
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

Naptha/soft cloth cleans grease. Don't oil fingerboards. It just gives the dust more attractive sticky stuff to stick to. Clean dry fingerboards stay the cleanest. Dust and exfoliated skin are attracted to moisture. Wipe the guitar dry with a soft cloth after you play.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 21:10:08
 
HolyEvil

Posts: 1240
Joined: Nov. 6 2008
From: Sydney, Australia

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

My Anders guitar came to me with super disgusting green gunk on the fretboard, I scrapped it off with a credit card because it's non scratch, and just wiped it down after.
It was FARKING disgusting, I don't understand how that much gunk can be on a guitar that is played.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 21:31:39
 
keith

Posts: 1108
Joined: Sep. 29 2009
From: Back in Boston

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Doitsujin

doit--major bbq error in not cleaning the grill. professor steven raichlen, bbq master of bbq university has 3 rules for the grill--keep it hot, keep it clean and keep it oiled.

as to the gunk--0000 steel wool will clean the gunk and polish the frets. i like to use micromesh 1500 then 4000 then 6000 to get the fretboard super polished and super fast. as to oil--a lot of folks recommend it but i would be wary of using it on the fretboard prior to/during the winter months when hydration is critical as oil repels water. of course this applies to us folks who spend money on hats, mittens and heating bills.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 4 2013 22:56:15
 
constructordeguitarras

Posts: 1676
Joined: Jan. 29 2012
From: Seattle, Washington, USA

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

I have cleaned some fingerboards on guitars that came to me for other repairs. Some had thick waxy buildups the source of which I cannot fathom.

I scraped carefully with a cabinet scraper and then wiped with paper towels soaked with naptha ("odorless paint thinner"). Then I dressed them the way I do new fingerboards, with coconut oil, which does not attract or retain dust; I wipe off the excess.

I would advise against using alcohol to clean any part of a guitar that has a french polish finish! And naptha dissolves wax better anyway.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 5 2013 7:17:44
 
Doitsujin

Posts: 5078
Joined: Apr. 10 2005
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to keith

quote:

doit--major bbq error in not cleaning the grill. professor steven raichlen, bbq master of bbq university has 3 rules for the grill--keep it hot, keep it clean and keep it oiled.


hahhaa great. ^^ That would mean el bundy is wrong??? Does this prof have any publications out on that?

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 5 2013 12:29:22
 
keith

Posts: 1108
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From: Back in Boston

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

doit--you are taking advice from al bundy. omg, has your life sunk that low? are you thinking about giving up botany to sell shoes? are you watching television with your hand stuck in your pants?

steven raichlen has published several books on barbequing and host the pbs shows, barbeque university and primal grill. i find cooking shows horribly boring but his shows have a weird attraction. the man has the greatest life--he gets paid, and paid well, to barbeque.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 6 2013 9:33:18
 
bursche

Posts: 1182
Joined: Jul. 19 2007
From: Frankfurt, Germany

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to estebanana

quote:

Dust and exfoliated skin are attracted to moisture.


That's why I use linen oil. To avoid contact with dust I keep the guitar in the case until the oil polymerizes. After removing the the excess oil which is almost solid after about 30 hours the guitar stays in the case for some more time. The oil has turned solid then and the fretboard is coated. I have seen this done on double bass fretboards that looked like a mirror later. Still looks different than varnish.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 6 2013 12:21:47
 
Doitsujin

Posts: 5078
Joined: Apr. 10 2005
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

hahaha keith. Grilling meat is a very rudimentary thing. I believe primitive ppl know most about it. :) so i believe him.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 6 2013 14:15:58
 
orsonw

Posts: 1934
Joined: Jul. 4 2009
From: London

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to estebanana

quote:

Naptha/soft cloth cleans grease.


Is lighter fluid the same as Naptha?
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 8 2013 17:08:43
 
estebanana

Posts: 9351
Joined: Oct. 16 2009
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

quote:

Is lighter fluid the same as Naptha?


I'm not sure, but I think a small amount on a cotton ball or Q-tip would clean finger grease away from frets. As long as it flashes off quickly, evaporates.

Naptha is a mild solvent and it dissolves oil and grease. To clean a fingerboard most makers agree on a light swipe with naptha and a tiny bit of 0000 grade steel wool used with care. But you want to go easy, it does not take much force.

Actually saliva on a Q-Tip will clean a lot of surface dirt. Painting conservators use saliva on cotton balls and Q-Tips to clean surface dirt from pictures. There is an enzyme in saliva that acts as a solvent for grease and dirt and saliva is safe to use on delicate paint films. And a drop of dish washing detergent and five drops of water will make a soap you can dip a Q-Tip in to clean embedded dirt in corners. Then wipe dry with tissue.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 2:59:40
 
JuanDaBomb

Posts: 189
Joined: May 18 2011
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to orsonw

quote:

ORIGINAL: orsonw

quote:

Naptha/soft cloth cleans grease.


Is lighter fluid the same as Naptha?


Having done some research on naptha because it is banned in California now, this is what I found out while looking for alternatives:

http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/index.php/topic/249662-naphtha-ronsonol-lighter-fluid-no-longer-contains-it/

But I notice you live in London so who knows, maybe your stuff does. I'd search for actual VM&P naptha in your local hardware store (B&Q is it?). The stuff cleans many types of surfaces without harming them. It's useful just to have around.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 3:17:00
 
estebanana

Posts: 9351
Joined: Oct. 16 2009
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

quote:

I'd search for actual VM&P naptha in your local hardware store (B&Q is it?). The stuff cleans many types of surfaces without harming them. It's useful just to have around.


Does it make a dry, dry martini?

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 3:55:07
 
krichards

Posts: 597
Joined: Jan. 14 2007
From: York, England

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

The only thing I ever put on fingerboards is lemon oil.
I mean 'the oil of lemons' not that synthetic stuff sold for guitars. I use it on new wood or you can clean with it.
Actually, you can use any citrus oil eg tangerine, lime etc

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 7:19:08
 
keith

Posts: 1108
Joined: Sep. 29 2009
From: Back in Boston

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to orsonw

i believe coleman fuel (white gas) is interchangeable with naptha--that is, coleman fuel will do what naptha does and does not.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 13:32:45
 
Nutellabrot

 

Posts: 13
Joined: Sep. 8 2013
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

I love lemon oil just for the smell of it. I use it only every other year and usually remember it when I just finished changing the strings.

I am also in the ukulele business and have seen quite a few ukes with the fretboard literally vanished in places. Deep groves especially where the C Major Notes are. Sweat with all the minerals it contains, oil and stuff, dirt, skin cells and moisture are a deadly mixture, at least for rosewood. Don't know if ebony can bear more but cleaning and applying a little oil afterwards can't be wrong. Wiping the instrument after playing it also is cool - but who can be bothered, really?
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 16:40:47
 
Ruphus

Posts: 3782
Joined: Nov. 18 2010
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

It all depends on the PH value and mixture of minerals you emit.
Some need to only touch the guitar for a couple of seconds for the strings to be corroded next time you open the case.

Others like me will leave no traces whatsoever, even if they do not wash hands before playing, and strings will last until mechanically worn out.

What grooves in f-boards are concerned, I always thought that they were caused by fingernails. Often times single imprints from nails can be observed too.

Ruphus
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 17:15:21
 
JuanDaBomb

Posts: 189
Joined: May 18 2011
 

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to estebanana

quote:

ORIGINAL: estebanana

quote:

I'd search for actual VM&P naptha in your local hardware store (B&Q is it?). The stuff cleans many types of surfaces without harming them. It's useful just to have around.


Does it make a dry, dry martini?


Dunno about martinis, but it sure does make for one fine Flaming Moe!

  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 18:17:20
 
timoteo

 

Posts: 219
Joined: Jun. 22 2012
From: Seattle, USA

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to JuanDaBomb

Wow, Paco has really stacked on the weight lately ... :-)



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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 9 2013 18:48:03
 
Guitarsid

Posts: 52
Joined: Aug. 5 2013
From: Maryland USA

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to timoteo

Clean oily finger grease with rubbing alcohol, and then on occasion (you can almost tell when it is needed due to the dry look), oil the board with linseed oil. Let it soak in and wipe away if any excess oil is applied. It soaks into the wood, it dries completely by oxidation/polymerization, and it does not attract anything whatsoever, quite the opposite, it will help keep the wood from absorbing the wrong oils, such as from your hands. It is also a very good water and moisture repellent. Linseed is a time tested and proven very good treatment for unfinished wood, as it has been used as a wood preservative, conditioner for many centuries for these very reasons.
Non-drying oils, such as those exuded by human hands, will not dry and do attract and accumulate dirt. This is the key, the drying vs non-drying oil property of different types of oils is the crucial difference in what kind of oil is good and which is bad for which specific application.
Wiki info on linseed oil is here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linseed_oil#Wood_finish
quote:

Additionally, a luthier may use linseed oil when reconditioning a guitar, mandolin, or other stringed instrument's fret board; lemon-scented mineral oil is commonly used for cleaning, then a light amount of linseed oil (or other drying oil) is applied to protect it from grime that might otherwise result in accelerated deterioration of the wood.


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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 13 2013 14:51:19
 
estebanana

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RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Guitarsid

quote:

Clean oily finger grease with rubbing alcohol, and then on occasion (you can almost tell when it is needed due to the dry look), oil the board with linseed oil. Let it soak in and wipe away if any excess oil is applied. It soaks into the wood, it dries completely by oxidation/polymerization, and it does not attract anything whatsoever, quite the opposite, it will help keep the wood from absorbing the wrong oils, such as from your hands. It is also a very good water and moisture repellent. Linseed is a time tested and proven very good treatment for unfinished wood, as it has been used as a wood preservative, conditioner for many centuries for these very reasons.
Non-drying oils, such as those exuded by human hands, will not dry and do attract and accumulate dirt. This is the key, the drying vs non-drying oil property of different types of oils is the crucial difference in what kind of oil is good and which is bad for which specific application.


Still not quite getting the chemistry right. Alcohol is not a complete solvent for oil, it might solve some hardened dirt or grime, but not all. It also dries out the wood. Sometimes restorers use Xelene whch is like alcohol, but will not act as a solvent for oil based finishes.

Naptha flashes off fast and is a solvent for oil, it usually solves and removes oil deposits alcohol won't remove. And more importantly naptha is not a solvent for Shellac or Lacquer finishes. This is important to tell to guitarists trying to clean their own guitars because they may not understand or be aware that alcohol dissolves French polished, shellac, finishes. That is why instrument makers refrain from telling customers to get near finishes with alcohol. There been more than on sad story of how some one cleaning an instrument spilled the alcohol over it or wiped too far..etc.

Linseed oil is a drying oil, put on wood? Sure, but it's not needed. A Q-tip with tiny bit of naptha is still better. It is impressive to a customer when they get a nice oiled dark fingerboard, but if you applied linseed oil every time you changed your strings and cleaned the fingerboard it would create a thick varnish like mess.


That is why I tell people to be fastidious about wiping off sweat and moisture from strings and fingerboard after a long playing session. It prolongs the life of the strings and wipes the grimy spooge off the fingerboard while it is wet and removable. Then think about where that oil goes when you put it on a fingerboard. It goes right into the windings of the strings. So sure some linseed oil is ok, but it's really not necessary. The preventative care of wiping the guitar dry, to me at least, is more important than applying all kinds of goops.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 13 2013 23:50:28
 
Guitarsid

Posts: 52
Joined: Aug. 5 2013
From: Maryland USA

RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to estebanana

quote:

but will not act as a solvent for oil based finishes.

Not getting the thread topic right, this cleaning is strictly talking about the cleaning of an unfinished fingerboard, not about cleaning the finish. Finish cleaning is another topic altogether, unless the fingerboard itself is finished and you want to preserve that finish. Rickenbachers have finished fingerboards, but I didn't think flamencos are normally finished.
When cleaning a fingerboard, you only need to moisten a rag or q-tip and clean off the residue on the unfinished fingerboard surface. There are a number of good cleaning agents one can use, lemon oil was mentioned, soapy warm cloths, spirits, alcohol, naptha,etc.
Alcohol will nicely clean off the unwanted oil and dirt. It can also be used to clean strings that have the same nasty finger deposits and residue deposited within the grooves of the wound strings. This will restore the bright sound and extend the life of the strings to a certain point. Alcohol and naptha both completely evaporate.


For finish cleaning, there are a number of caveats and specifics associated with proper cleaning and maintenance and french polished finishes are the most delicate .
Avoid any contact of any cleaner with a french polished guitar. Never wipe or clean a french polished surface with a wet cloth, with solvents, or with polishes; do not even use any of the cleaning agents and compounds specially sold for guitars - these are not intended for French Polished instruments. It is possible to clean off a french polished guitar with a very wrung out, slightly damp cloth, but one must excercise caution.
But for guitars with other commonly used modern varnishes, a number of cleaners can be used, soap and water, lemon oil, naptha, alcohol, murphy's oil soap, mineral spirits, a mix of turp and oil, commercial guitar cleaner formulations, etc.
Even these finishes have caveats, for instance, some should not be used with nitrocellulose, but some should be used for nitrocellulose.

As I said, the oiling of a fingerboard need only be done on occasion, wipe off any excess, it is absorbed by unfinished wood and does not get on the strings. I have done it many times, for many decades, to many guitars and I have never seen any problem whatsoever, I have only seem much benefit. I have never ever seen a fingerboard that was over oiled, but countess times, I have seen it greatly improve dried out fingerboards. Very old, worn, and dry fingerboards will soak up oil, some are often literally as thirsty as they can be and are very often badly in need of some oil. As I said, this is a centuries old, time tested, wood treatment that provides benefits without problems.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 14 2013 3:21:35
 
estebanana

Posts: 9351
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RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

I feel like channeling Anders....*rant*

First, in another thread you said that waxing modern finishes will help preserve them. Really? Which finishes? Catalyzed lacquer, Phenolic Resin, Alkyd resin..non of which can be touched by waxes.

Are you saying this stuff because you actually know, or are you inventing stuff because yo think it might be so? Just because it works in the electric guitar world does not mean it works for flamenco guitars.

You tell people what you want to tell them, but by how you post I don't find you to be a reliable narrator of guitar issues. Fart on your fingerboards, I don't care. The deal is how people care for flamenco guitars and I tell my customers to wipe the bloody thing off after then play and don't put goop on it. You can tell them any fracking thing you want, whether you actually know about flamenco guitars or you are making it up as you go along.

In the end it's merely cleaning a ****ing finger board who gives a flying ****? For ****s sake. Is that all you got? Tell me what the inside of a 1906 Manuel Ramirez looks like. Because I don't care about stupid issues like fingerboard cleaning.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 14 2013 5:00:07
 
estebanana

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RE: Best way to clean a fingerboard (in reply to Pimientito

quote:



Guitarsid
aficionado


Posts: 47
Joined: Aug. 5 2013
From: Maryland USA

RE: waxing guitar (in reply to Guitarsid)
No New Messages
Natural resin varnishes all also age, dry, and crack eventually, so periodically treating the guitar with carnauba wax or lemon oil will also help to slow this processs and preserve these finishes longer. Newer synthetic resin varnishes are less prone to this deterioration because the newer synthetic complex polymers are far more durable than traditional natural resin varnishes/shellac. So while newer poly finishes may not benefit as much from feeding the surface, they will also keep the guitar looking like it has been dipped in plastic forever.

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Report Abuse | Date Sep. 7 2013 3:16:33


This is what you posted the other day. It makes no sense at all.

Flamenco guitars get French Polished or sprayed with lacquer, both finishes are best kept by doing as little as possible. Wipe with a dry cloth, visit your guitar maker when they need care.

Some cheaper flamenco guitars occasionally get modern finishes, but which ones? Catalyzed lacquer is super hard and nothing really touches it, you can't put wax on it to 'feed' it.

Phenolic and Alkyd resins are also fairly hard and polyurethane is thick and formulated to not show scratches as white crusty lines. So they look like plastic? Who cares? One of them is actually plastic, the other three are seldom used on high end flamenco guitars so what's the point of discussing them?

I get the feeling that you just made that stuff up and it's not your experience over a long period of time as a builder of flamenco or classical guitars. A which is fine, but of you floss on like you you are the **** you need to really be the ****.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Sep. 14 2013 5:32:47
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