Un-Buffing the Buffed

Vintage, Modern, V & C series, Fretless, Signature & Special Editions

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Starless
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Un-Buffing the Buffed

Post by Starless »

I notice plenty of threads round these parts extolling the virtues of various waxy substances to preserve that factory fresh Ric shine, but being the owner of a McCartney Modified Matt finish C64s, I need some guidance as to how to go about restoring that factory fresh non-shine.

It is a 5 year-old bass, and is showing signs of shininess where the forearm rests on the front body contour.

Any non-destructive tips on how to re-satinise that which has become polished over the years?
jwr2

Re: Un-Buffing the Buffed

Post by jwr2 »

You can refinish an oil finished bass with a scratchy pad and some tung oil and mineral spirits ... Also Johnson's paste wax is a good choice for preserving an oil finished bass ...
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bassduke49
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Re: Un-Buffing the Buffed

Post by bassduke49 »

Yes, but I'm pretty sure the C64s has a semimatte (semigloss?) clear coat that you would only scratch up and it would not allow tung oil to penetrate. It's not just nicely sanded unvarnished wood. I could be wrong on this.
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jingle_jangle
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Re: Un-Buffing the Buffed

Post by jingle_jangle »

It is not possible to unshine the wear shine on one of these, convincingly, without actually respraying the matte conversion varnish.

You CAN dull the shine by scuffing with Scotch-brite, but while this kills the shine, it also leaves scratches behind, where before there were none.

You don't want to oil over a conversion varnish finish--it just makes stuff sticky and spotty (ask Charley G. about his 335!).
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