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Stripping a finish


Knottyhed

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Poly I would assume... it is a Maverick Bass guitar.


A heatgun... would a blow torch do the same job?

 

 

A blow torch would do the same job, but it's more focused heat - you have to be reeeally careful or you will burn the wood. I blowtorched an old Explorer body once and made a mess of it.

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yea i tried using cheical on poly and did just about nothing. Now i have no experience(sp) witht the heat gun but unless that takes three months you should be ok. Your could also try sanding thats what I ended up doing.

 

 

 

i stripped a poly body with a heat gun in less than an hour.

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Heat gun for poly seems to be the best way - most chemical strippers just shrug their shoulders while poly laughs at their ineffectiveness.

One word of caution - be sure to wear some kind of eye protection, and gloves aren't a bad idea. The poly can pop off when heated up, and a hot chunk of softened plasticy goo hitting your skin/eye/whatever isn't a pleasant thing.

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Question, as one of my dreams is to have a natural Fender '72 Telecaster Deluxe AND I'd like to take the poly off the neck as well and replace everything with tinted lacquer...

 

1. I'm looking on Amazon for heat guns and some of them have multiple temperature settings. What temperature is the best?

2. Even after the heat gun, will there be some poly residue left over that should be sanded off before I put a clear lacquer coat on it?

3. Will the heat gun take the clear poly finish of a maple neck and fretboard? Will I need to be very careful about the heat thinning the glue that applied the frets?

 

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Question, as one of my dreams is to have a natural Fender '72 Telecaster Deluxe AND I'd like to take the poly off the neck as well and replace everything with tinted lacquer...


1. I'm looking on Amazon for heat guns and some of them have multiple temperature settings. What temperature is the best?

2. Even after the heat gun, will there be some poly residue left over that should be sanded off before I put a clear lacquer coat on it?

3. Will the heat gun take the clear poly finish of a maple neck and fretboard? Will I need to be very careful about the heat thinning the glue that applied the frets?

 

 

Here's my experience coupled with your questions:

 

1) Ive only used heat guns that had one setting - HOT. I'd start with the heat gun a good distance from the surface and bring it in slowly until I got a reaction. It's a feel kind of thing.

 

2) Yes. And when you think you're done with sanding you will need to sand MORE!

 

3) Uh oh. I've never stripped a fretboard so I can't really help you. If you do it then be careful of the inlays also. I would think that it would be really easy to accidentally fry them.

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Personally I never had luck with the heat gun method. Basically by the time there was enough heat to remove poly, there was also enough heat to char the wood, warp the neck, crack the wood...basically bad stuff. I prefer sanding everything off....granted, it's more messy.

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If you want chemicals, try AirCraft Remover by KleenStrip. You can get it at an autoparts store. It is the only chemical that I have found that can remove poly. It should soak for a couple of hours, and then the finish will just wipe off. That is the best alternative if you are wary of using a heat gun.

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If you want chemicals, try AirCraft Remover by KleenStrip. You can get it at an autoparts store. It is the only chemical that I have found that can remove poly. It should soak for a couple of hours, and then the finish will just wipe off. That is the best alternative if you are wary of using a heat gun.

 

I've had a couple of bodies that didn't even flinch when hit with the KleenStrip Aircraft Remover. Some of that poly out there is ridiculously tough.

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Personally I never had luck with the heat gun method. Basically by the time there was enough heat to remove poly, there was also enough heat to char the wood, warp the neck, crack the wood...basically bad stuff. I prefer sanding everything off....granted, it's more messy.

 

 

It sounds like you were trying to vaporize the finish off of the guitar. When done properly there should be no charring or warping or any other bad stuff.

 

The trick is to keep the heat gun moving and not concentrate on one spot. You only need to soften the finish enough to peel it off with the scraper. It does not need to be heated so much that the finish turns to goo or starts smoking.

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