Originally posted by Corpsegrinder88
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NGD - Jackson RR2. Finally got one of these...
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It's all about the blues-rock chatter.
Originally posted by RD...so now I have this massive empty house with my Harley, Guns, Guitar and nothing else...
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I love blank fretboards also.
But what I don't get is that Techs and Luthiers, even classical ones will say, no you must have side dot markers at least on elctric guitars, otherwise you won't know where you are.
But think about it, all classicals and flamencos and my classicals have no inlays. Being able to draw a house brick, freehand on a piece of paper to the exact size with 0.5mm tolerance, and being able to screed a floor to exact falls over 40 metres I struggled with this concept. Then one night I had a few beers.....and suddenly all of my masters teachings became clear.
You just don't see John Williams performing at the Albert Hall, bevvied up on 10 pints of Stella.
I'd kill for that neck though for a Star.You can't really be jealous of something you can't fathom.
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Proly a dumb question. is it ok to oil a ebony fretboard with lemon oil? Local guitar tech told me not too. What other oils can you use to polish an ebony fretboard?
whats the best way to get rid of that nasty finger dirt build up along the frets? would a fine 0000 steel wool be good to use on a ebony fretboard?I love guitars, Always have and always will.
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Originally posted by Nezgual View PostProly a dumb question. is it ok to oil a ebony fretboard with lemon oil? Local guitar tech told me not too. What other oils can you use to polish an ebony fretboard?
whats the best way to get rid of that nasty finger dirt build up along the frets? would a fine 0000 steel wool be good to use on a ebony fretboard?
Use naptha (lighter fluid) to clean the fretboard, don't use steel wool on the fretboard - just to polish frets! Just use a rag with some lighter fluid and you'll be fine. After you're done go over it with some lemon oil, mineral oil or whatever.It's all about the blues-rock chatter.
Originally posted by RD...so now I have this massive empty house with my Harley, Guns, Guitar and nothing else...
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Yes, lighter fluid should do the trick.It's all about the blues-rock chatter.
Originally posted by RD...so now I have this massive empty house with my Harley, Guns, Guitar and nothing else...
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Dunlop used to have a kit with both of those, a polishing cloth, and a microfine fret polishing cloth but it doesn't seem to be available anymore on their site. MF still lists it though...
Get the guaranteed best price on Care Kits for Guitar & Bass like the Dunlop Guitar Fingerboard Conditioning Kit at Musician's Friend. Get a low price and free shipping on thousands of items.
Note these products are not meant to be used with maple fingerboards. Works killer with rosewood and ebony in my experience.Last edited by Hellbat; 08-05-2011, 11:32 AM.GTWGITS! - RacerX
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You can also use say a G string to get closer to the finger cheese near the frets.
I use Dr stringfellow Lem oil almost exclusive. you can also use a brand called Lizard spit. Heard its good and some even use Virgin Olive oil. I have done that on REALLY dried out Ebony boards and brought life back into it..
But theres lots of Stuff out there..Last edited by Corpsegrinder88; 08-05-2011, 11:52 AM.
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Originally posted by Hellbat View Post
Dunlop used to have a kit with both of those, a polishing cloth, and a microfine fret polishing cloth but it doesn't seem to be available anymore on their site. MF still lists it though...
Get the guaranteed best price on Care Kits for Guitar & Bass like the Dunlop Guitar Fingerboard Conditioning Kit at Musician's Friend. Get a low price and free shipping on thousands of items.
Note these products are not meant to be used with maple fingerboards. Works killer with rosewood and ebony in my experience.
Nice, think ill try the dunlop cleaner and prep and deep conditioner. I'm thinking I would use theprep first to clean the finger cheese then the conditioner. Now is the conditioner is the oil right? Let that soak in. or lastly use the lemon oil?
I've been playing guitar for such a long time and never had a guitar worth taking care of, now I do.I love guitars, Always have and always will.
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The conditioner is an oil, you don't need to apply oil after. Essentially you apply it from the bottle's built in foam tip all the way up the fretboard. Let it sit for 30 seconds or so and then wipe away all excess with a clean cloth.GTWGITS! - RacerX
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