My Explorer has been p1ssing me off for ages... :(
But for £30 and a week of hard "Trinny & Susannah" work, it is now stunning :D
It was a Dark Cherry (see cr@ppy photo - the only "before" shot I have). In principle, I love this colour, but it wasn't quite right.
That would have been OK, but I've had it for over two years now and it has always been sticky as hell in my hands. I did all the usual rub it back a little & polish it up. It would seem ok, and then next time I picked it up, five minutes in and it was "eeeyurgh :x".
The finish (bodywise) felt soft and so prone to accidents, kinda fragile - making the thing feel larger and more cumbersome than it actually is. And the thing always reeked of a "hot chocolate" sort of smell, which I liked originally, but I've come to loath.
Either this thing never cured properly or Gibson's current clear coat just does not agree with me (I have no such problems with my Faded SG).
Now, I know a lot of folk would be thinking resale value, and this guitar is the closest I've ever come to considering this factor, but really I don't usually move instruments on (or if I do I sell them for peanuts to nephews and nieces!!). I tend not to regard any guitar I own with any reverence other than "my guitar, doesn't it make nice noises". So, if it's not doing it for me, and I know what's wrong, I am likely to attempt something knowing it might destroy the thing. In this case, although I was starting to think of getting rid of it, I do kinda love this geetar - it plays lovely, it just stank and felt like sh1t all the time! :lol:
Then last weekend, I was watching Judas Priest Live Vengeance (1982) and noticed that one of KK's original Vs had the back of the neck stripped.
So last Saturday afternoon I crossed my fingers and started sanding the neck... Flippin heck - that was LOADS tougher than sanding a poly neck! By the time I gave up (knackered!) I was not sure whether I'd done the right thing... I was through to wood in a small area, and I knew that it would feel right if I could finish without doing damage... That night I did a lot of thinking, looking at the body and its colour, looking at the grain through the finish, deciding to look into doing something more drastic... Sunday morning, while waiting for the shops to open, I did loads of research on here and the interweb in general. Then I went out and got me:
- Nitromors varnish & lacquer remover (cos you guys said it takes nitro off easily)
- A bottle of white spirit (cos I'd forgotten I'm an oil painter and I've got buckets of the stuff :roll:)
- A scr@per thingy
- A tin of "Dark Mahogany" wood dye (cos the blurb on the back of the next item said dye might be wanted)
- A tin of Rustin's Danish Oil (cos I found a post from Wez recommending it to someone months ago, and then when I did the "Tung vs Tru vs Danish vs Snake vs etc Oil" research that morning, I ended up with the information that Danish would give me a flatter, more satin finish)
- A box of they disposable safety gloves (I was thinking nitromors, but actually the wood dye just eats them!)
I already had a selection of Briwax and different gauges of steel wool.
So, a sunday afternoon of "what am I doing?!" lacquer stripping out in the back garden, followed by a week of early mornings and late evenings "doing stuff"... and now I absolutely
love it. :D 8)
It's still not a strat, obviously (:lol:). But my most expensive guitar, the one that stayed in its case all the time, the one that was distinctly unloved, now feels like a new girlfriend...
(I nearly called this a NGD, I'm that chuffed/excited by it!)