Relicing a body - getting the nitro to crack/craze

  • Thread starter scratchman
  • Start date
  • This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links like Ebay, Amazon, and others.

scratchman

Tele-Meister
Joined
Jan 11, 2008
Posts
233
Age
51
Location
Leeds, UK
Hello all.

I've finished a Tele body using nitro and after 11 months of the body sitting in the sunshine (well, occasional sunshine, this is the UK!) I wanted to get the finish to crack as it's a relic project. I've used a -50 freeze spray on the finish but am getting no change at all. The finish is solid and I used plenty of coats of clear (before sanding back of course). Any ideas why I'm getting no effect? Too thin?

Many thanks!
 

Muzikp

Friend of Leo's
Joined
Nov 5, 2010
Posts
3,283
Location
Sacramento
The freeze spray worked really well on mine. Is the guitar body already cold when you hit it with the freeze spray? I stuck mine in the sun for an hour or so and then hit it with freeze spray and I got little crazing type cracks all over.

I also stuck it in our extra freezer for about 2 weeks (I sorta forgot about it, I had a lot going on). When I took it out it had nice cracks all over the finish.

In the pictures the bigger cracks are the ones that happened from being in the freezer and the little tiny cracks (if they show up in the pic) are from the freeze spray.









It also helps the cracks to show up if you rub something dark into them right away. I found the nitro sorta healed itself a bit so having something smeared into the fresh cracks helped.
 

sfcmark

Tele-Meister
Joined
Apr 17, 2011
Posts
337
Location
Augusta, GA
...I also stuck it in our extra freezer for about 2 weeks (I sorta forgot about it, I had a lot going on). When I took it out it had nice cracks all over the finish...


I was going to suggest the freezer trick. I would think it will work best if it is removed to a very warm room.

@Muzikp - Where did you get the single-ply humbucker pickguard? Is it Bakelite/Garolite?
 

Colt W. Knight

Doctor of Teleocity
Ad Free Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2007
Posts
18,974
Age
41
Location
Garland, Maine
I was going to suggest the freezer trick. I would think it will work best if it is removed to a very warm room.

@Muzikp - Where did you get the single-ply humbucker pickguard? Is it Bakelite/Garolite?

SFC - If you need a bakelite guard with a hummer route, send me a PM. I am making a batch of guards this weekend, and I am sending one to another member. I can send you one too.
 

MrTwang

Friend of Leo's
Joined
Feb 9, 2009
Posts
2,799
Location
London, England
Hello all.

I've finished a Tele body using nitro and after 11 months of the body sitting in the sunshine (well, occasional sunshine, this is the UK!) I wanted to get the finish to crack as it's a relic project. I've used a -50 freeze spray on the finish but am getting no change at all. The finish is solid and I used plenty of coats of clear (before sanding back of course). Any ideas why I'm getting no effect? Too thin?

Many thanks!

Rather than leaving it in the sunshine, I know som reliquers heat the guitar with a hairdryer before applying the freeze spray to make the difference between hot and cold more extreme.
 

felis

Tele-Afflicted
Joined
Sep 4, 2011
Posts
1,234
Location
Antwerp/Belgium
Hello all.

I've finished a Tele body using nitro and after 11 months of the body sitting in the sunshine (well, occasional sunshine, this is the UK!) I wanted to get the finish to crack as it's a relic project. I've used a -50 freeze spray on the finish but am getting no change at all. The finish is solid and I used plenty of coats of clear (before sanding back of course). Any ideas why I'm getting no effect? Too thin?

Many thanks!


Too much plastics in modern nitro lacquers? I’m by no means an expert on paint or relicing, but I’ve read this: (link removed)
 

motor_city_tele

Tele-Afflicted
Joined
Apr 25, 2005
Posts
1,924
Location
motor city
Freeze Spray is the only thing that worked for me. I've tried going from a hot spot to the freezer overnight - nuthin, went from 5 degrees F to holding it in front of the furnace register - nuthin. I use auto air conditioner charge and actually pour the liquid onto the body. I then rub shoe polish and liquid dye into the cracks before they close back up.
 

sfcmark

Tele-Meister
Joined
Apr 17, 2011
Posts
337
Location
Augusta, GA
Too much plastics in modern nitro lacquers? I’m by no means an expert on paint or relicing, but I’ve read this: (link removed)

I suppose it's possible in some cases. The spec sheet for Deft lacquer shows 15.5% plasticising alkyd by weight, where the MSDS for Minwax lists none. Perhaps that's why some people find the Deft to be slow in curing and "softer."
 

jefrs

Doctor of Teleocity
Joined
Nov 20, 2007
Posts
13,337
Location
Newbury, England
Liquid Nitrogen "LN2" which can be had from welding suppliers boils at 77K = -196°C

It is very, very, very cold! and requires careful handling but is not what we would call dangerous.
 

Muzikp

Friend of Leo's
Joined
Nov 5, 2010
Posts
3,283
Location
Sacramento
I was going to suggest the freezer trick. I would think it will work best if it is removed to a very warm room.

@Muzikp - Where did you get the single-ply humbucker pickguard? Is it Bakelite/Garolite?

I made it from a Garolite sheet that I ordered from McMaster Carr. I think Colt is the one that directed me to the correct material to order. I got a very large sheet of it for about $20. I've cut multiple guards from the one sheet and still have a lot left.

But it sounds a lot easier to just give Colt your address ;).
 

sfcmark

Tele-Meister
Joined
Apr 17, 2011
Posts
337
Location
Augusta, GA
I made it from a Garolite sheet that I ordered from McMaster Carr. I think Colt is the one that directed me to the correct material to order. I got a very large sheet of it for about $20. I've cut multiple guards from the one sheet and still have a lot left.

But it sounds a lot easier to just give Colt your address ;).

I reckon it might. ;)

I already found the right Garolite to order from McM-C (for future reference) in a thread I started the other day. I just like to track down all the sources I can as I go along; I found a $20 savings on my chosen bridge that way last week. :)
 

Maricopa

Friend of Leo's
Joined
Feb 4, 2009
Posts
3,820
Age
59
Location
Phx, AZ
Too much plastics in modern nitro lacquers? I’m by no means an expert on paint or relicing, but I’ve read this: (link removed)

I'm sure there are chemical differences in lacquer make up over the decades and yes, lacquers made for stringed instruments do have plasticizers in them because not everyone wants their one year old guitar to look like shi...er, um..I mean, cool and old. ;)
However, Mr. Ruokangas is leaving out that these ultra-thin old vintage lacquer finishes have been curing...and losing plasticizers....for 40, 50, 60 or more years. The reason they are so hard and so thin is because they are old, worn and have sunk tremendously from when they were new.

BTW, I have a 79 yr old wood body National that's lacquer finish gets sticky under my arm just like he claims only modern lacquers do.
 

scratchman

Tele-Meister
Joined
Jan 11, 2008
Posts
233
Age
51
Location
Leeds, UK
Thanks all for your input. I tried yesterday to do the hairdryer/freeze spray combination and on close inspection I DID get some checking. However I think it is only happening in places where the finish is thickest. I will try it again and this time rub something into the cracks because as someone has said, the lacquer seems to have 'healed' over and so I can't see anything now.
 

steve_robinson

TDPRI Member
Joined
Oct 30, 2003
Posts
80
Location
Manchester, UK
Stick it in the deep freeze overnight, warm up and repeat.

I find that gives crazing across the grain which looks to me more natural than the china plate crazing of the chill spray technique.
 

tangelolemon

Tele-Meister
Joined
Dec 19, 2009
Posts
164
Location
Brooklyn, NY
BTW, I have a 79 yr old wood body National that's lacquer finish gets sticky under my arm just like he claims only modern lacquers do.

triglycerides in some peoples' skin oil act as a plasticizer, as well. Some people have higher triglyceride content in their bodies than others. I'm pretty sure that's what causes the 'finish getting softer under the arm' thing on older guitars.

I've had old guitars before that get gummy, while others of the same make, model and year do not. Sometimes I think it depends on the chemical composition of the skin oils of whomever owned it the longest.
 
Top