damaged442
New member
- Apr 10, 2013
- 577
- 0
Love that finish on the PRS. Definitely don't see many like that, thats for sure! I would play it exactly like it is!!
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Resale???
Years ago I got a deal on a blond with maple 75 P-bass. I didn't like the color but loved the sound. Zip stripped it,sanded and a coat of black Krylon everyday for a month...0000 steel wool in between. Then on the final coat I rubbed it out with Gel-gloss because that is what I had.
Guy at the hip guitar store told me it was the best DIY paint job he had ever seen. After I told him. Never liked maple necks and sold it.
Still have a 87American standard strat and 93 American standard J-bass with rosewood necks. And they bathe in lemon oil.
Point is play it like it is or change it with some sandpaper/steel wool.
If it was mine that raw look and texture would have to go. I'ld sand it smooth then start rubbing oil in
I've polished a bunch of guitars. Most right before I sold themHere's my SG; the nitro had accumulated plenty of scuffs and swirls over several years of knocking around. Turned out great and really made the guitar look brand new...I should have taken some before/after shots:
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I also painted, sanded and polished this Warmoth body in olympic white acrylic lacquer for a build I did a couple years ago:
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For the OP, w/r/t cleaning, I usually find a damp microfiber is ample for cleaning off the accumulated sweat & dust that'll get on your instrument. I'll usually wipe the guitar down every time I do a string change. If you do this periodically, you'll typically never really need anything more aggressive. Clean hands are something a lot of guys never think about...grimy hands = grimy guitar.
k4df4l....excellent work..I am impressed.
Beautiful. Loved the sound many of those SG's could produce.
Regardless of what the guy from PRS told me today, I am still thinking this is Nitrocellulose lacquer. I have the original hang tag that was on the guitar, it lists the model as "ST24 Nitro" the data inside the milled out rear pickup area indicates it had a SATIN finish. "The PRS Guitar Book" indicates that Standard 24 Satin guitars from 2006 forward had 'nitro-cellulose colours'.
Well, see there you go... I could take a entirely different approach and start putting stickers all over it , then dragging it behind my car on the way to work.![]()
Yes, well there seems to be a lot of misinformation in general about silicone![]()
Even more so when it comes to issues related to musical instruments... Near as I can tell, I only have two real concerns about silicone... one is that I'm not sure I want any of it getting on my fretboard. The other, is as it relates to potentially getting into the wood itself bellow the surface of the finish on the body/neck.
From what I can see, the finish to me looks like it was originally satin, and was left purposely with an open grain type finish and look.
Thus, my thinking if you were to apply any type of glaze or to polish the finish with what we commonly use in the auto world, those residues left behind in the polishing-glazing processes may become trapped in the open grain-pores, and then become virtually impossible to remove.
You could try a very small area on the back of the instrument and see what he results are? Note that I think personally that you'll be taking a chance doing such.
Usually the spray waxes from the various guitar makers shouldn't be problematic, should enhance some gloss and eveness to a point.
Other alternatives, if you are not liking the existing finish, want to change it to a high gloss one, I'd probably look to a professional Luthier for such.
Sounds like you've gotten some improvement, and that's good.
I imagine what you were seeing on the satin finish, is areas where rubbing from hands, fingers, clothes took place, and those areas appeared glossier in comparison to other areas on the guitar, correct?
I know with the two used basses I had on hand, the Rickenbacker Chris Squire, and the '62 American Fender P-Bass in rare Mary Kaye finish both had less than stellar pickguards. The Fender was easy, simply a new 3 ply white-black-white pickguard from Fender for $15 and all screw holes lined up. Only some minor inletting around the pickups was required for a perfect fit.
The Chris Squire Bass was more problematic. Only a 1000 built, and only a 1000 pickguards they wanted out there, for fear of conterfeitiing such a model, which meant sending them the original pickguard to get another new one.
The one they sent me, not one hole lined up, and the new pickguard was actually in worse shape than the old one. These pickguards are clear acrylic, backsprayed white, with the Chris Squire Sig placed first before spraying white on the back.
Luckily, they did not toss the old pickguard, and then found a suitable, better shape replacement.
Idiotically, I sold both those basses, made a nice profit on both, but both are worth quite a bit more today than what I sold them for. If, you can find a Rick Chris Squire Bass, or '62 P-Bass in Mary Kaye finish, both mint and in like new, or being in unplayed new condition, you will be shocked at their costs. I seen one Rickenbacker on ebay some time back at $6K.
http://www.rickenbackerguitars.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/-802805093804380.jpg
Mark
I've polished a bunch of guitars. Most right before I sold themHere's my SG; the nitro had accumulated plenty of scuffs and swirls over several years of knocking around. Turned out great and really made the guitar look brand new...I should have taken some before/after shots:
![]()
For the OP, w/r/t cleaning, I usually find a damp microfiber is ample for cleaning off the accumulated sweat & dust that'll get on your instrument. I'll usually wipe the guitar down every time I do a string change. If you do this periodically, you'll typically never really need anything more aggressive. Clean hands are something a lot of guys never think about...grimy hands = grimy guitar.
I've been reading a bit more about the PRS Satin series... apparently it was the entire line was introduced in 2006. I'm wondering if my guitar isn't one of the first of them, given it's actual official build date was 12/29/2005 but is apparently a 2006 model. I also wonder what the significance is of the writing inside the area where the rear pickup goes... " 2006 NAMM SATIN FINSH" Could it be that this guitar was made to be on display in their booth that year? or is that just some common wording that would have been on virtually any guitar of this type and time period???
As I understand the origins of the 'SATIN' line, it started after the 2005 20th anniversary models in a satin finish sold so well. They then also realized they could make and sell these a bit cheaper because the finish didn't require as much work. Apparently people liked them because the finish was thin... and some felt that made them sound better too. But I suspect that price being cheaper also influenced a lot of purchases, just as it did for me when I got this guitar.
After posting the photo of the sticker and writing, bellow my rear pickup over at the PRS forum, it seems there is a good chance that this guitar was part of the items displayed at the 2006 NAMM show. So I do think this is very likely one of the earliest of the PRS Standard 24s with the Satin finish. Still doesn't make it worth much , but it is kinda cool to know.