One such item is a product called microballoons, which is a filling material. This comes in useful with guitar repairs too, as I am used to doing close intricate work, and I also have a large array of tools and items for manipulating plastic.
Westone guitar parts series#
I have mentioned in the Westone Thunder rebuild series that my other hobby is building model cars. The scratchplate damage is the other main issue with this guitar, but it is fixable with no huge chunks missing just a split below the bridge and a little piece gauged out. I was lucky, none of the marking was so deep that it couldn’t be sanded out, and after an hour or two I had a pristine body, looking as good as the day it was cut! The grain is very attractive, with some darker marks behind the bridge area which look like scratches, but and just part of the natural colouring of the Alder body. This lead to a hot sweaty Sunday afternoon with an array of different types of sandpaper and a sanding block to remove all traces of the old finish and the blemishes. As the wood will be on display under a few coats of wood oil, the base has to be as perfect as possible. Unlike a painted finish, it isn’t possible just to sand back the top coat and use wood filler to fill any blemishes. The original body finish was a pale, yellowy clear lacquer which suited the look of the guitar, but now has some quite deep scratches and dents on the front, back and upper horn (see pic). As I said in part one of the Westone Cutlass rebuild, I have decided not paint this guitar, but to keep it natural looking.