Kippa-Dee
01-03-2007, 11:03 PM
Greetings guys.
I played a Warwick Streamer Special, and it's been painted in a deep red gloss.
I've meticulously maintained her, meaning every time strings are changed she gets a good soaking of Dr. Duck's Axe Wax and a good polish, the fretboard gets a good load as well to stop it drying up. After every session I wipe down the strings, and wipe down the entire body top to tail with a microfibre cloth, and don't touch her as she goes into the case. This she never has evil finger grease or skin oils on her for more than 6 hours a day. In fact, most of the gigs we play I end up wearing a largish Metallica sweatband on right hand which stops even my wrist rubbing against the finish... but not so at rehearsals.
Anyway, does any member have any suggestion how to remove the plethora of scratches all over her? Obviously I understand scratches are a given, but in some lights she just looks ancient and badly scratched, while in others she looks absolutely brand new... Is there a way to preserve the gloss finish without it tarnishing, or to get her resprayed in a plain woodgrain 'matt' finish which won't scratch as bad?
Cheers
I played a Warwick Streamer Special, and it's been painted in a deep red gloss.
I've meticulously maintained her, meaning every time strings are changed she gets a good soaking of Dr. Duck's Axe Wax and a good polish, the fretboard gets a good load as well to stop it drying up. After every session I wipe down the strings, and wipe down the entire body top to tail with a microfibre cloth, and don't touch her as she goes into the case. This she never has evil finger grease or skin oils on her for more than 6 hours a day. In fact, most of the gigs we play I end up wearing a largish Metallica sweatband on right hand which stops even my wrist rubbing against the finish... but not so at rehearsals.
Anyway, does any member have any suggestion how to remove the plethora of scratches all over her? Obviously I understand scratches are a given, but in some lights she just looks ancient and badly scratched, while in others she looks absolutely brand new... Is there a way to preserve the gloss finish without it tarnishing, or to get her resprayed in a plain woodgrain 'matt' finish which won't scratch as bad?
Cheers