Best fretboard cleaner?

Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

Steel wool and the edge of my credit card. I juice it up with some type of fretboard oil (linseed oil perhaps?) I purchased from my local shop. It's in a bottle labeled "Fretboard Oil", and is yellowish in color.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

So it's not worth spending some cash on those "fretboard conditioners"?
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

That's likely similar to the oil I mentioned. To actually clean rosewood, you just scrape the crap off of it. Using the fine steel wool gets rid of the gunk, and polishes the frets.

BTW, I just read your signature, and I'm incredibly jealous.... I've been GASing for an LG for years :D
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

Dude, I can totally understand. Before I got mine, I had been wanting one sooo bad. They are really good guitars tho. Very well built. It's also a nice platform if you are into upgrading pickups and such. My fav guitar ever actually.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

0000 steel wool and Naphtha for cleaning
Lemon oil or Fret Doctor for conditioning
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

I know it isn't the normal thing to do, but I've been using Gibson guitar polish for absolute years, and my rosewood fretboards are in great condition. The polish came with my 12 string in '95, and I will soon need to get some more.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

It's good stuff. Really good. I use it only every few months, because (to me) that's all you need. Then again, my fingers are very clean and not oily.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

So it's not worth spending some cash on those "fretboard conditioners"?

Conditoner is not cleaner.

For ebony and rosewood boards, use lighter fluid and buff the entire board and frets with 0000 steal wool. after, use a conditoner that is MADE for a guitar. Dont root through a hardware store for something. Yes, it is worth it. I use Stew Mac fretboard conditioner.


This questions is posted every week on here. Something should be permantly posted.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

The alleged "correct" way to do this is with naptha and 000 or 0000 steel wool. It works well enough, but if the board's really filthy, you may want to swab it down with something more absorbant than steel wool on the first few passes.

Along with Dan Erlewine, I'm skeptical of the repackaged snake oil sold to credulous musicians. He recommends unboiled (food grade) linseed oil, but I find that it's too gummy. Personally, I find that extra-virgin olive oil works as well as anything, doesn't gum up and you already have it in your gourmet kitchen anyway, right? ;)

I don't use any oil containing petroleum distillates on my fingerboards.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

Just to agree with Ayrton, Fret Doctor is the single coolest product you can buy for your guitar! There's not much more I like than the smell and the look of that freshly conditioned board, even if I don't like the oily feel until it dries a few days later.

I'll stop beating the horse now.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

Agree to disagree, I guess, but I don't use anything either with petroleum distillates, or any petroleum products on my fretboard. I figure either something made by a reputable company (like Dean Markley for example, assuming you're not clinically paranoid :D), or the oil from the plant itself (i.e. rosewood oil for rosewood fretboards). Sure, some long-term research might need to be conducted to verify what works best (i'm game :D) but ultimately I'd trust something made specifically for luthiers and/or by the company (Fender's product comes to mind for my Strat), or something natural to the wood, to work.
 
Re: Best fretboard cleaner?

What company is it that says not to oil a fingerboard? C. F. Martin? I can't remember offhand.

Something I neglected to mention in my previous post is that if you use naptha, the reason to quickly wipe it down with something absorbent while it's still wet is that it's such a volatile solvent that it will take the dissolved dirt deeper into the grain if you don't. Naptha's amazing stuff, and thank you for not smoking while you're doing all this.:firedevil

The thing about oil is that vegetable oils usually become gummy, so the guitar-care peddlers use petroleum distillates for their magical balms because they don't (and they're also cheaper...funny how that works, huh?). I have read a lot of misinformation saying never to use vegetable oil on a guitar because of this gunkiness, but the assumption that all vegetable oils get nasty is simply wrong. Most have become polymerized through heating and processing, but a fine-quality, cold-pressed oil like extra-virgin olive oil does not. Linseed oil is actually used as a sealant and finish, which is OK, I suppose, but I'm not sure that's what I want to do with my fingerboard.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top