Brandon Breeze
Active member
I picked up this RG several months ago. When I got it most people likely wouldn't have bought it, one of the most grimey guitars I've ever seen, nasty dirt everywhere, rust all over, lots of dings and dents, some of them really deep.
I cleaned it thoroughly and set it up to play real nice, polished it as much as I could. It looked pretty decent, but at the same time really blah. Plus some of the "dings" we're gouges really deep, we're talking like 1/8" deep, through the poly finish, through the sealer, and into the wood.
Specs Are:
Basswood 4 piece body Tung oil finished
Maple 5 piece neck quarter sawn center
Bartolini LCE60 bridge pickup
V7 Ibanez neck pickup
All parts 3 way blade
All parts 500k tone pot
Jumbo frets
Schaller locking tuners
Everything else is the Ibanez hardware that came on this guitar
Some Heavy Riffs:

5 piece neck with mostly quarter sawn center!

Removing the poly via heat gun. I have tried a few chemical finish removers, and they didn't do anything to this stuff.

After lots of sanding, ready for oil

I found out quickly that the flamed maple, was a veneer, so thin that the dark stain was all the way through, so when trying to sand it off, I sanded through the veneer almost instantly

I cleaned it thoroughly and set it up to play real nice, polished it as much as I could. It looked pretty decent, but at the same time really blah. Plus some of the "dings" we're gouges really deep, we're talking like 1/8" deep, through the poly finish, through the sealer, and into the wood.
Specs Are:
Basswood 4 piece body Tung oil finished
Maple 5 piece neck quarter sawn center
Bartolini LCE60 bridge pickup
V7 Ibanez neck pickup
All parts 3 way blade
All parts 500k tone pot
Jumbo frets
Schaller locking tuners
Everything else is the Ibanez hardware that came on this guitar
Some Heavy Riffs:

5 piece neck with mostly quarter sawn center!

Removing the poly via heat gun. I have tried a few chemical finish removers, and they didn't do anything to this stuff.

After lots of sanding, ready for oil

I found out quickly that the flamed maple, was a veneer, so thin that the dark stain was all the way through, so when trying to sand it off, I sanded through the veneer almost instantly






