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Damage repair help


Basilpea
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I discovered a horrible gouge on the front of my Rick Turner tonight (see photos).  The family were here today but needless to say nobody else knows anything about it- it's been unanimously agreed that consistent with my senility I must have done it without realising it.  I'm not that precious about these things, but it couldn't be in a worse place so I'd like to try and mitigate it if possible without spending a fortune, so the question is do I take it to a luthier or have a go myself?  I did think about carefully painting in some clear lacquer, but would it need some form of colourant first (the wood looks like spruce)?  The one thing I don't want to do is make it worse.  Advice from one of you bass genii out there would be most appreciated.

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.... as the wood seems to have a finish on, I'd be careful about applying too much heat as this could damage this. I've used the damp cloth and soldering iron trick on a few of my Warwick basses in the past (with no finish, apart from the wax) that worked wonders. However my Warwick Stage 1 5 string has a coloured oil finish I couldn't get it to work at all (they have some hard finish applied over the coloured oil).

However for your type of instrument I'd personally edge towards a professional repair. I'd not want to cause any further damage.

Peace.

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The steaming method is used on bare, non lacquered/varnished/whatever finishes. You take a damp rag/cloth, place it over the offending area and then apply a soldering iron to the cloth over and around the damaged section. The steam permeates the wood fibres making them swell up and flatten(ish). Some light application of wire wool, or similar abrasive is sometimes used to finish off. Whether that will work in this instance is unclear, as the top looks like it has been sealed. However, if there are cracks in that coating, it may allow the steam to get in and do its magic, it could also make it look worse. Rotten thing to have happened ☹️.

EDIT: Just seen @Reggaebass’s suggestion; I’d go with that.

Edited by ezbass
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Yes I do have some of these but only about 5 or 6, so I may not have a suitable colour, I'll check it out, probably worth buying some more if necessary.  I'll let you know how it goes.  From YouTube, the pro's seem to set some store by using Superglue ss a filler, then levelling with a shielded razor blade, then sanding and polishing locally With multiple grades of wet/dry.  That sounds like the sort of thing I should try on an old piece of polished wood first.

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28 minutes ago, Geek99 said:

Paging @Grangur who I believe used to restore furniture ?

You called, Sir?

Hello. Hmm this looks interesting. The popular thought here of "sweating" the wood is what I'd try. The idea of the soldering iron I've never had success with. I use a household steam iron.

Not certain if this will work though. Sweating works when the grain fibees are bent in, this has been hit with a sharp, curved object like a metal tube. The edge gas cut the fibres. Also, as someone else has said, you would damage the lacquered finish. The lacquer also has a colour to it. So rattle-can clear lacquer won't be able to do a great job. 

Wax, as suggested by @Reggaebassis good for cracks and such, but once you have pushed it in here, theres not much for the wax to hold on to. With regards to matching the colour, you use the wax by melting it in your hands and different colour waxes can be blended. So colour is no problem. But it probably won't hold.

The best solution IMHO would be an epoxy-type hard filler and a good colourist would be able to fill it and replicate the grain in the stain used to make it almost invisible.

I would search locally for a furniture finishers or French polishers. They will be best equipped to deal with it.

If you simply want a cheap solution, then I'd simply use a thick superglue epoxy, but that instrument deserves better.

Edited by Grangur
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Bummer, man. I have had good luck filling deep scratches with superglue, building it up gradually and then fine sanding very carefully around the scratch. I thing Grangur is right about the wood fibrous being cut, though, so sweating probably wouldn't work.

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 30/06/2020 at 07:11, Grangur said:

You called, Sir?

Hello. Hmm this looks interesting. The popular thought here of "sweating" the wood is what I'd try. The idea of the soldering iron I've never had success with. I use a household steam iron.

Not certain if this will work though. Sweating works when the grain fibees are bent in, this has been hit with a sharp, curved object like a metal tube. The edge gas cut the fibres. Also, as someone else has said, you would damage the lacquered finish. The lacquer also has a colour to it. So rattle-can clear lacquer won't be able to do a great job. 

Wax, as suggested by @Reggaebassis good for cracks and such, but once you have pushed it in here, theres not much for the wax to hold on to. With regards to matching the colour, you use the wax by melting it in your hands and different colour waxes can be blended. So colour is no problem. But it probably won't hold.

The best solution IMHO would be an epoxy-type hard filler and a good colourist would be able to fill it and replicate the grain in the stain used to make it almost invisible.

I would search locally for a furniture finishers or French polishers. They will be best equipped to deal with it.

If you simply want a cheap solution, then I'd simply use a thick superglue epoxy, but that instrument deserves better.

This pretty much covers it. That's a gouge, not a dent, steaming will have very little effect and could easily wreck the finish making it a bigger problem. A good furniture restorer would be my first call,.

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On 30/06/2020 at 11:00, songofthewind said:

Bummer, man. I have had good luck filling deep scratches with superglue, building it up gradually and then fine sanding very carefully around the scratch. I thing Grangur is right about the wood fibrous being cut, though, so sweating probably wouldn't work.

I've done this. It's something folk who're into woodturning recommend. It's OK. It's better than using a filler of the wrong colour. To be honest, my experiance of this is the glue takes the sanding dust and makes it darker. It also won't have any reproduction of the look of the grain. So, to be honest, given the beauty of the bass in question, I'd not do it in this case.

Solution: get a pro in and check the household insurance.

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Agreed re the insurance. However, to clarify, I didn’t mean mixing the superglue with wood dust, I meant a straight drop fill with clear glue only. I’ve just looked at the job I did this way, and it’s pretty convincing. It’s not as big a scar as the one the OP is showing us.

 

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10 hours ago, Grangur said:

Solution: get a pro in and check the household insurance.

As above, get a professional price, then think long and hard about house insurance.  Once you make a claim, they will gouge (pun unintended) you for at least 5 years afterwards (or their mates will if you try and change insurer).  Insurers are out to make a profit from your premium and any claim you make.  I am still amazed at the price and quality of repair to my G&L that Jon Shuker did.  The bass came back significantly better than when it left G&L, the cost was well below the excess on my house insurance, i.e. it would not have been worth claiming.

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  • 3 months later...

Hi,

I ended up taking it to a local guitar repair workshop who said they could repair it but could not make it perfect.  They were right.  To be honest it doesn't look an awful lot better after their repair, however it is now sealed and smooth to the touch (believe they filled it with Superglue and sanded it down), and they only charged me £40.  If you want to see photos it's now up for sale on this forum.  

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I don’t know, the colour looks spot on in the photos and it’s a nice smooth finish, although you can see the original scar, it’s not bad at all. Short of scraping back a much larger area and refinishing I think they’ve done quite well; it’s not terrible by a long shot.

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On 10/11/2020 at 20:07, Basilpea said:

Hi,

I ended up taking it to a local guitar repair workshop who said they could repair it but could not make it perfect.  They were right.  To be honest it doesn't look an awful lot better after their repair, however it is now sealed and smooth to the touch (believe they filled it with Superglue and sanded it down), and they only charged me £40.  If you want to see photos it's now up for sale on this forum.  

Knowing how upset I am about my dent (my MM is in the Musicman Porn Thread, and I bet you couldn't even tell me where the dent is from the pic...) I can understand that it probably doesn't feel any better, but from those pics I think it looks a LOT better! 

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Thanks for the feedback guys.  I did get some other quotes from £400 to £1000+ which didn't seem like a great investment, and having claimed over £20k on my house insurance last year for burst pipe damage I didn't want to go down that route either, so I think on balance I made the right choice.

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