Truth. I got my hands on a fantastic 80s Japanese fender strat. It was covered in thick heavy blue resin. It took me three hours to with an electric sander to liberate it, but it is night and day better!bishopdante wrote: Tue Apr 26, 2022 4:05 pm If you find an acoustic guitar which has got the horrible plastic varnish, you can have that stripped and sanded back, and given a polished and/or oiled finish. This will result in a much better and louder guitar, and unfortunately many a case of over zealous plastic coating down the Indonesian factory can result in several hundred grams of resonance damping tone death to have been applied.
There are specific manufacturers who are guilty of making quite nice guitars which they bury under a sheet of plastic, so you get this "dipped in glass" polyurethane finish. This same plastic can be used to make a variety of bushings and things like skateboard wheels with the softer durometers. It also doesn't like UV much, and is prone to all the crappy cracking/crazing/dulling issues that Polyurethane and Polyester boat varnishes are famous for, which is what these are.
Getting the stuff off is a nightmare, but if you can switch the finish of a guitar for the lightest dusting of french polish, with the faintest swish of mica grain filler, it'll sound loads better.
Removing the varnish can also require reducing the thickness of the guitar's top, which can be done in a skilled fashion and improve the overall quality of the instrument. Taking the bridge off is often required, but taking the top off is pretty drastic - you can usually get away without doing that.
Find an expensive guitar that just sounds like crap? It was probably nice before they turned it into a plastic sculpture and cast it into a block of resin.
Lots of guitars are in their realistic application, mostly ornament / status symbol. Especially expensive ones. They are basically wood-art, and there is a whole variety of ornamental abalone encrusted display instruments going back to antiquity which go with the ornamental swords, ornamental fruit trees, and so on.
The telecaster is a good, modern break with that tradition, cares mostly not what varnish you use, and can be used to knock down doors or break windows to escape from a burning building. No need to access that emergency hammer under that sheet of glass, I'll just reach for the telecaster. If you keep your "priceless" tele under glass, in case of fire I'll use mine to break the glass, and grab it on the way out. If you dent or refinish a telecaster it will basically sound the same. Nitrocellulose is what I'm on, and maybe you can hear the difference. That plastic varnish is mighty thick on some '80s Fenders, and getting rid of it will make the guitar feel lighter if not sound better.
For an acoustic guitar, thick paint or varnish can ruin the sound, and you'll think this manufacturer have lost their mind asking for money for such an instrument. All it took was the car painter to do a shift on the Takamine line. Suddenly hundreds of shiny guitars... that sound shit.
Re: Buying a for real (i.e. expensive) acoustic
61"lol, listen to op 'music' and you'll understand"....
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