If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I need advise. This a very nice acoustic I have that is checked bigtime. I also have a 1968 Epi with the same problem. Do I dare do anything or will it just make the checks swell? Thanks
There is no repair for finish checking except a complete refin. About all you can do with a lacquer-finished guitar is try to prevent checking by being super careful about temperature or humidity changes.
I thought about oiling it (Lemon). But I just felt that the oil would seep and raise the lacquer. Maybe leaving it alone is the right course. We all know that we want to improve the finish.
People pay thousands of dollars more for a murphy aged les paul reissue and I think checking has added to the beauty of your guitar. I would keep it that way and enjoy.
There is no repair for finish checking except a complete refin. About all you can do with a lacquer-finished guitar is try to prevent checking by being super careful about temperature or humidity changes.
To me a nice tight crazing/checking adds to a vintage guitar. It makes it show its age and its awesome! Wait until it starts falling off in your hands before refinning imo.
As mentioned above the best course of action is to leave it alone. As lacquer ages it becomes brittle but the wood still expands and contracts with temp and humidity. I put my guitars in their cases should I see big changes in the weather coming. This may not make the the finish last any longer but that's what my mind tells me.
Comment