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Thread: Dingotone Guitar Wax has dried up

  1. #11
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    Guys you really dont need to be rubbing anything into rosewood fretboards, they have their own oils.

    Cosmetically they might look better, but thats it, a bit of virgin olive oil maybe x2 a year is all you need, i have some pure lemon oil that i have used for over 20yrs

    Naphta (lighter fluid) for loosening the dirt. Then 0000 steel wool across all the fingerboard. Finally, clean the board, polish the frets (mask the fingerboard and use the 0000 steel wool). When the frets are clean you can then pure lemon oil the board, its pretty simple really.

  2. #12
    GAStronomist wazkelly's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tonyw View Post
    Guys you really dont need to be rubbing anything into rosewood fretboards, they have their own oils.

    Cosmetically they might look better, but thats it, a bit of virgin olive oil maybe x2 a year is all you need, i have some pure lemon oil that i have used for over 20yrs

    Naphta (lighter fluid) for loosening the dirt. Then 0000 steel wool across all the fingerboard. Finally, clean the board, polish the frets (mask the fingerboard and use the 0000 steel wool). When the frets are clean you can then pure lemon oil the board, its pretty simple really.
    What do you suggest someone should use on a maple fret board as that will be waiting for me on build # 4.

  3. #13
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    Waz that will depend on what you want to finish with, Fender use a lacquer then dress system, seeing as the frets are all ready in the necks on these i would finish my neck (poly, nitro, tru oil, min wax wipe on poly etc) then clean the frets up

  4. #14
    Moderator dingobass's Avatar
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    Tony is correct in saying Rosewoods do have their own oils.
    However I have found that a lot of the kiln dried stuff seems to lack the oil, I guess it must oxidize or something?

    There is a huge difference in the timber available today compared to what we got 20- 30 years ago.
    Some of it was so oily all you needed to do was buff it with cloth with a drop or two of lemon as Tony suggested.
    I can remember one peice that was so oily I was worried the glue wouldn't hold

    There is always a workaround for glitches, mistakes and other Guitar building gremlins.....

  5. #15
    Overlord of Music Andy40's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tonyw View Post
    Guys you really dont need to be rubbing anything into rosewood fretboards, they have their own oils.

    Cosmetically they might look better, but thats it, a bit of virgin olive oil maybe x2 a year is all you need, i have some pure lemon oil that i have used for over 20yrs

    Naphta (lighter fluid) for loosening the dirt. Then 0000 steel wool across all the fingerboard. Finally, clean the board, polish the frets (mask the fingerboard and use the 0000 steel wool). When the frets are clean you can then pure lemon oil the board, its pretty simple really.
    I prefer the aesthetics of the wax over an oil on a rosewood fretboard now. Oily wood or not it still looks dry to me which isn't my subjective preference. I suppose the wax must also give the fretboard some protection over my durty little fingers.
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  6. #16
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    I wipe my boards after every play, i clean them and give them a rub down with a tiny tiny amount of pure lemon oil every string change, i dont change strings as much as i possibly should, i have some ducks axe wax here i got for free from the USA and its not too bad.

    If you over hydrate your fretboard, the oils just come weeping back out and stuffs your strings.

    A friend of mine has been using "simple green all purpose" to clean his guitar fret boards
    Safety & Environmental friendly Non-toxic, biodegradable, non-hazardous, non-flammable, non-corrosive so i suppose it cant hurt. Mine used to get a good dose of beer and whiskey
    Last edited by tonyw; 08-02-2016 at 03:30 AM.

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  8. #17
    Member peterh's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tonyw View Post
    Waz that will depend on what you want to finish with, Fender use a lacquer then dress system, seeing as the frets are all ready in the necks on these i would finish my neck (poly, nitro, tru oil, min wax wipe on poly etc) then clean the frets up
    Tony, I've likely got this wrong - are you suggesting using those finishes on the entire neck including fretboard or neck EXCEPT fretboard. If the latter, what about the maple fretboard - Dr Duck, lemon oil, ???.

  9. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by peterh View Post
    Tony, I've likely got this wrong - are you suggesting using those finishes on the entire neck including fretboard or neck EXCEPT fretboard. If the latter, what about the maple fretboard - Dr Duck, lemon oil, ???.
    The full finish is on a maple necks with maple fretboard only, the lemon oil etc is for rosewood fretboards these you dont finish but i know some who have.

    I know some people who keep their maple boards without any finish, but they end up looking very dirty and very sad very quickly.

    I just disposed of (correctly) all my Tru Oil large and small bottle, it was getting on in age so i wont bother trying to use it, i am going for a wipe on poly this time, then i might see how the Dingo Beta stuff goes on a project i am about to start after he releases it.

    I could just go and arc up my mates guitar spray booth, but i have a thing for hand finished guitars these days.

  10. #19
    Member peterh's Avatar
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    So on my tele kit (arrives tomorrow) which has all maple neck/fb, would it be okay to do Tru Oil on neck and fretboard? What about staining/dyeing the fretboard?

  11. #20
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    I am not sure how the Dingo Tone stuff goes on maple fretboards, if thats the stain your using, but most frets are stuck in with CYA glue, if you use a wipe on stain and any of this glue is on the fingerboard the stain will not take up, best way i found was to spray a nitro stain on the neck and fretboard called a fader coat then top it off with some clear poly or nitro, wiping on finishes on maple fretboards creates a build up around the frets.

    You can wipe in on, as many have probably done, just i prefer not to use wipeon on maple fretboards.

    I am sure if you start a build thread you will get more answers to your questions than i can provide, seeing as alot of people would of used wipeons on maple.

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