m.koren wrote:sunset_gun wrote:...salt (to age machine heads), and coffee (to age plastic parts)
And this affects the feel of the instrument how?
"Thin-skinning" the finish and rolling fretboard edges is NOT the same as relicing. I've taken down the edges of fretboards and sanded bare the back of a few necks for comfort. When done properly, this does not affect the overall look of the instrument at all. It does not make the instrument look beat up or any older than it truly is. Relicing is posturing and posing, plain and simple - for looks only. At the risk of sounding like Rick Reuben...to say people age hardware and scratch up guitar bodies for comfort is a complete lie. It's done for looks and nothing more. At least be honest about that.
Some things I did for comfort and some things I did to make it look old and beat up. There's a feel-good factor on both fronts (for me). And remember, I did it myself for virtually no money to a cheap instrument.
An ex-bass player of mine was broke as a joke when we were bandmates 7-13 years ago. He sanded his Squier P-Bass body down to the plywood and didn't care what people thought, because it sounded amazing that way. Professional married life came along with better equipment to match, but that bass is still his #1.
If I'd sand anywhere, it would be the back of a guitar neck to feel the wood, but that's asking for warpage. As for the relic'd look, I'd rather earn it the honest way instead of buying a way to tell tall tales of fabulated miles logged in a van.
iembalm wrote:Can I just point out, Rick, that this rant is in a thread about a cartoon?