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Headstocks.


hellothere
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[quote name='hellothere' post='1160107' date='Mar 13 2011, 03:40 AM']Can knocks and chips in the wood of a headstock be repaird or patcheed up on a unpainted headstock without it looking awful and if so how?[/quote]
think it depends how bad the knock or chip is,if its unpainted my guess would be a near as poss match wood filler.

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[quote name='Ou7shined' post='1160261' date='Mar 13 2011, 10:29 AM']Yes. Tiny dings etc. can be sanded out then cleverly refinished. Chips or gouges need more work.

Filler will hardly ever look good.[/quote]
Totally agree....or a big CND sticker if you cant be arsed sanding.

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If it has a clear finish, you can do a fair bit with steaming out the dented part (if you have bare wood, wet tissue/cloth on it and put a soldering iron on briefly, so the steam pops the dented wood fibres out), that also cleans out the grub, then fill the hole with layers of superglue then polish down.

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[quote name='Mr. Foxen' post='1160288' date='Mar 13 2011, 10:52 AM']If it has a clear finish, you can do a fair bit with steaming out the dented part (if you have bare wood, wet tissue/cloth on it and put a soldering iron on briefly, so the steam pops the dented wood fibres out), that also cleans out the grub, then fill the hole with layers of superglue then polish down.[/quote]
im gonna deliberatley dent my project"frank the fecker"to try this.....

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[quote name='Mr. Foxen' post='1160288' date='Mar 13 2011, 10:52 AM']If it has a clear finish, you can do a fair bit with steaming out the dented part (if you have bare wood, wet tissue/cloth on it and put a soldering iron on briefly, so the steam pops the dented wood fibres out), that also cleans out the grub, then fill the hole with layers of superglue then polish down.[/quote]
+1
Although you can't steam out an end grain dink and superglue dries darker.

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[quote name='Ou7shined' post='1160443' date='Mar 13 2011, 01:28 PM']+1
Although you can't steam out an end grain dink and superglue dries darker.[/quote]

...or lighter. Two spots filled on my MIJ 75 RI, one dried darker, the other lighter, than the surrounding wood. Why, I have no idea!

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  • 2 weeks later...

Tryed steaming it out. It was on the edge right on the top of the headstock and allthough it hasn't came out perfectly it looks alot better. I think because there was a chip in the middle of the ding (if that makes sense) it stopped the grain popping out completely. I find superglue can dry really lumpy so I have used a really thin layer of clear nail varnish and will see how that goes. Now the ding can only be seen close up. Thanks for the suggestion.

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