G
gtrwun
Well-known member
Naphtha
That's kind of nasty.Racerxrated":2hx3l5x7 said:Unless an unfinished neck sits unplayed for a long time, your natural oils on your hand should be all that's needed.
http://www.beafifer.com/boredoctor.htmmaddnotez":18gpfkex said:Where are you guys getting the Fret Doctor?
I see on Amazon but the bottle has a link doctorsprod.com. I figured I would see what the website says but I do not see it listed there. Only bore cleaner and things for woodwind instruments.
Chester Nimitz":2vozle2n said:http://www.beafifer.com/boredoctor.htmmaddnotez":2vozle2n said:Where are you guys getting the Fret Doctor?
I see on Amazon but the bottle has a link doctorsprod.com. I figured I would see what the website says but I do not see it listed there. Only bore cleaner and things for woodwind instruments.
Order here Mang.
Naptha to clean, fret doctor twice a year, once in spring once in fall.
FD is bore oil and the best and ive used it all in 40 years.
Lemon oil contains mineral oil which has water in it and actually dries out your fret board, not good.
Racerxrated":1q74adct said:Unless an unfinished neck sits unplayed for a long time, your natural oils on your hand should be all that's needed.rstites":1q74adct said:I use naphtha to clean really gunky fret boards. I use linseed oil or lemon oil on my necks once a year or two. I put it on pretty liberally, let it set a couple of minutes and then wipe the excess off with a rag.
Most of my necks don't have a finish on them, so it's important to apply oil to them to protect the necks. Unlike some others above, I use oil on my maple necks due to this.
maddnotez":3rdjw9ef said:So the naptha I can use all the time? Like with every string change or every few?