caring for a polyurethane coated guitar

Col Mustard

Ambassador of Perseverance
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So let's pool all our wisdom, Tone Room crew.

There's been much written and discussed about the care and maintenance
of our Lacquer coated instruments. I have participated, and I have also
learned a lot.
IMG_1099@100.jpg
But not all my guitars are finished in Lacquer. Some of this stuff does nothing for a Polyurethane finish.

This afternoon, I removed the strings from an Epiphone Wilshire and my
much loved MIM Telecaster deluxe. The Epi has a rosewood fingerboard,
and I cleaned it with lemon oil because I've been playing the Epi a lot and
it had my grimy prints all over the place. Then I treated the fretboard with
a shot of Music Nomad's Guitar One.

I normally don't use Lemon Oil much, because I don't think it does much,
but in the case of an already treated fretboard that needs only surface cleaning,
the lemon oil worked fine and did no harm.

The "Guitar One" has both cleaners and Carnauba wax included, according to
the blurb. So that is a fine product for a Rosewood board, either that or Music
Nomad's F-1, which is intended for fretboard use.

I also like to wipe down the rosewood fretboard with a square of Gorgomyte
cloth. This has a great effect on the frets AND the wood, and often comes away
more grimy than I would have imagined. Which means that the grime is no longer
on the fretboard. I'm sure this enhances tone and sustain... *grins

Well and so... this is all pretty common knowledge, and even common practice.
But I don't think any of these efforts or products have the slightest effect
on a polyurethane finish.
Fender cleaning@100.jpg
I wiped this Fender Tele neck down with the above cloth which I had been using to clean the Epiphone.
That took away all the fingerprints and shined the frets up just a bit, but I could see no other effect.
This MIM Telecaster is finished in Polyurethane AFAIK, and seems impervious to anything but hammer
blows or bullet hits. I have owned this instrument for almost ten years, and it was made in 2006,
and it shows no damage or ill effects from all that time. I haven't babied it... or even worried about it.

The back of the neck felt plasticky once I began getting used to it, so I worked it with a green
kitchen scrubbie, and then very carefully with a piece of steel wool (outside, with a good breeze
blowing the steel bits AWAY from the pickups)... No more plasticky feel, and no more problems.
I love this maple neck. I use the tele mostly for slide, so I haven't dug deep ruts into
the polyurethane'd fingerboard. I know it happens to Lacquered maple necks, do we need
to protect a maple fingerboard if it's finished in Poly?

This MIM Tele has been problem free since I got it professionally set up, and replaced the wiring
harness, using 500k pots for its Fender hum buckers. Problem free seems pretty cool to me.

It doesn't seem to need anything but an occasional wipe down with a clean cloth. The finish is black,
so fingerprints do show up, but they are easily removed with a bandanna, which I usually keep in
the case for wiping down strings.

Am I missing something? The Epiphone Wilshire also seems impervious, and has also been problem
free. The Wilshire has a white finish, which doesn't show anything. Finger prints might be there, but
how would anybody know? *grins Lemon oil just beads up and doesn't do anything... wipe it off.
Guitar polish just beads up and doesn't do anything. wipe it off.

My dog came in out of the rain once, ran right to the music room and shook his fur free of rain
drops and sand, all over all the exposed instruments in there. I followed him in there with a few
choice words and grabbed the nearest bandanna, to rescue my babies. I was very careful with the
two Lacquer coated instruments that got splattered, and wiped them down lovingly, trying not to
scratch them with sand grains. Lacquer can develop spots if it gets splattered with muddy water.
Pair EpiFender@100.jpg
But the Telecaster and the Wilshire were unaffected. I let them
air dry, and the sand fell off. A quick wipe down with a clean bandanna, no problem.

What else should we do to care for polyurethane finished guitars?
 
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So let's pool all our wisdom, Tone Room crew.

There's been much written and discussed about the care and maintenance
of our Lacquer coated instruments. I have participated, and I have also
learned a lot.
View attachment 17482
But not all my guitars are finished in Lacquer. Some of this stuff does nothing for a Polyurethane finish.

This afternoon, I removed the strings from an Epiphone Wilshire and my
much loved MIM Telecaster deluxe. The Epi has a rosewood fingerboard,
and I cleaned it with lemon oil because I've been playing the Epi a lot and
it had my grimy prints all over the place. Then I treated the fretboard with
a shot of Music Nomad's Guitar One.

I normally don't use Lemon Oil much, because I don't think it does much,
but in the case of an already treated fretboard that needs only surface cleaning,
the lemon oil worked fine and did no harm.

The "Guitar One" has both cleaners and Carnauba wax included, according to
the blurb. So that is a fine product for a Rosewood board, either that or Music
Nomad's F-1, which is intended for fretboard use.

I also like to wipe down the rosewood fretboard with a square of Gorgomyte
cloth. This has a great effect on the frets AND the wood, and often comes away
more grimy than I would have imagined. Which means that the grime is no longer
on the fretboard. I'm sure this enhances tone and sustain... *grins

Well and so... this is all pretty common knowledge, and even common practice.
But I don't think any of these efforts or products have the slightest effect
on a polyurethane finish.
View attachment 17483
I wiped this Fender Tele neck down with the above cloth which I had been using to clean the Epiphone.
That took away all the fingerprints and shined the frets up just a bit, but I could see no other effect.
This MIM Telecaster is finished in Polyurethane AFAIK, and seems impervious to anything but hammer
blows or bullet hits. I have owned this instrument for almost ten years, and it was made in 2006,
and it shows no damage or ill effects from all that time. I haven't babied it... or even worried about it.

The back of the neck felt plasticky once I began getting used to it, so I worked it with a green
kitchen scrubbie, and then very carefully with a piece of steel wool (outside, with a good breeze
blowing the steel bits AWAY from the pickups)... No more plasticky feel, and no more problems.
I love this maple neck. I use the tele mostly for slide, so I haven't dug deep ruts into
the polyurethane'd fingerboard. I know it happens to Lacquered maple necks, do we need
to protect a maple fingerboard if it's finished in Poly?

This MIM Tele has been problem free since I got it professionally set up, and replaced the wiring
harness, using 500k pots for its Fender hum buckers. Problem free seems pretty cool to me.

It doesn't seem to need anything but an occasional wipe down with a clean cloth. The finish is black,
so fingerprints do show up, but they are easily removed with a bandanna, which I usually keep in
the case for wiping down strings.

Am I missing something? The Epiphone Wilshire also seems impervious, and has also been problem
free. The Wilshire has a white finish, which doesn't show anything. Finger prints might be there, but
how would anybody know? *grins Lemon oil just beads up and doesn't do anything... wipe it off.
Guitar polish just beads up and doesn't do anything. wipe it off.

My dog came in out of the rain once, ran right to the music room and shook his fur free of rain
drops and sand, all over all the exposed instruments in there. I followed him in there with a few
choice words and grabbed the nearest bandanna, to rescue my babies. I was very careful with the
two Lacquer coated instruments that got splattered, and wiped them down lovingly, trying not to
scratch them with sand grains. Lacquer can develop spots if it gets splattered with muddy water.
View attachment 17484
But the Telecaster and the Wilshire were unaffected. I let them
air dry, and the sand fell off. A quick wipe down with a clean bandanna, no problem.

What else should we do to care for polyurethane finished guitars?

I think you pretty much covered all the bases...
 
Seems like the days of sweat, smoke filled bar rooms/arenas, spilled drinks, chips from banging them around all over the place and showing off, etc are gone ;)
 
Poly impervious to anything but hammer blows & bullet hits is pretty well spot on. The only "all poly" guitar I have is my (maple fretboard) Tele. It gets wiped down after use with a Fender microfiber cloth & that's all it seems to need.
Damn, a dog in the music room. I wont even have one in the house. Cheers
 
WE dont invite people to the house -----we have 9 dogs---- they dont like visitors
 
I generally find there is very little maintenance required for a poly finish. Every now and then I’ll spritz it with a little spray guitar polish and wipe off the finger prints and give it a little shine.

That’s about it.

My Strat has a poly finish on the body and it looks about as good as the day I got it new in 2006.
 
Im eating pizza at the moment 17 eyes are trained (one of them has a dead eye) ........

I haven't had a dog for a while, but the last would sit on the side verandah at the screen door with a clear line of sight to the dining table. If he looked at us while eating, all I had to say in an even tone was "don't look". He'd continue sitting there but with his head turned in the opposite direction. And people say you cant teach an English bull terrier.
As to visitors & kids, no problem, great "people" dog & fine with a bitch being brought into his yard, but my girls bitch definitely wasn't. People & kids welcome, but bring your dog or bitch into our dogs territory at its peril. And I'll never stick my hands into a dog fight that came about because someone was stupid enough to bring their dog into mines territory. Cheers
 
I use pure carnuba wax from an auto supply store. It kind of protects from finger prints, etc.

Especially fingerprints from a chimp called Chubbles who had a short stint with the Monkees.:wink:

monkey-music-2.jpg



;>)/
 
Tele gets wiped down after use with a Fender microfiber cloth & that's all it seems to need.
Damn, a dog in the music room. I wont even have one in the house. Cheers

My dog's name is Jack...
He's a great companion, and goes everywhere with me (almost). So he gets some slack sometimes.
He's a very good dog, and behaves himself mostly.

Here he is, observing a sound check critically:
onstage 5@100.jpg

Here he's telling me the highs are a bit shrill in the mains, but the monitors are fine...
(I actually knew that, but I let it go...)
Onstage 6@100.jpg

Here he is backstage at a festival, guarding the instruments...
Jack with guitars@100.jpg

The stage at this particular event was a Farmer's flat bed hay wagon, so he crawled underneath
to enjoy the cool grass and watch the girls dancing.
Jack under the stage@100.jpg

Here he's on my front porch, parked himself next to my traveling bag, so as not to
be forgotten and left behind.

King of the Porch@100.jpg
 
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So much fuss is made over lacquer...

Who can tell me a REAL advantage? I do appreciate the elegance of lacquer on my Gibson
acoustic, and on my Gibson SGs. I've heard all the theories about how it lets the wood
breathe, but I don't understand how this could affect tone (except maybe on Acoustic instruments).
 
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