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look 171 look 171 is online now
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 17,651
Quote:
Originally Posted by slodave View Post
BTW, the LP Studio should have had the color mixed into the lacquer, not a stain on the body.

Also, oil based lacquer when sprayed correctly should dry pretty much on contact with the wood.

Lastly, each coat of lacquer melts into each other. This is why it’s fairly easy to repair a lacquer finish on an older guitar. Doesn’t matter how old the lacquer is, any new coats will melt into the old. With Polyurethane, each layer lays on top of each other, making finish repairs more difficult down the road. You can sand into a poly finish and see the layers.

Look171: the finish will affect the sound of acoustic or electric guitars. When I built my LP I went out of my way to replicate the finishing techniques exactly as Gibson did it in ‘59. Granted, the exact composition of today’s oil based lacquer isn’t anywhere near what it was back then, I drove far to source it as close as I could.
I know nothing about guitars but tried to build a couple with a friend when we had nothing to do way back. He plays but knows nothing about building them. We actual made a couple of acoustic ones, and it sound OK to my untrained ears. Once we applied the finish, it sound muffled. I am surprise that it affects electrical guitars too. I always thought it was all in the electronics?
Old 02-26-2020, 09:27 AM
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