Structo wrote:
I've done a couple stained guitars with binding and it can be a bitch.
Mine have plastic binding so the masking was a must. I tried scraping it the first couple times but I would either nick the wood or take too much material off.
Aha! I can help you get your scraping game on.
Here is a graphic of my typical scraper. I make them from carbide flat stock, thick enough not to chatter when you drag it. I think about .050 or so average.
You shape the binding channel at the edge of a belt sander according to your overall dimension. Start with the thin edge, the 'short', then sand the tip off to match the depth. Leave a couple mil in both dimensions so the color actually overlaps the binding. If you look closely, there is ALWAYS a tiny tiny edge of color left over the bindings to keep a great line.
This does both faces at once.
I hope it's understandable.
Thanks for all the help, all of you. I hope this helps someone.
EDIT: Also about materials. Deft is good. The best lacquer available is that sub-$2 a can stuff at Walmart, and some of the home improvement outlets. It's made in China..
Unlike the modern stuff you get in quanity NO plasticizer. For my vintage repair work, I MUST use it. I flip the cans, drain the air, then puncture the can and drain a case into my quart gun.
It's not just a good standby product, it's the BEST!
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Signatures have a 255 character limit that I could abuse, but I am not Cecil B. DeMille.