Erlend_G said:I would NEVER use lemon oil on ANY fretboard.
The reason for that is that the "lemon oil" you get in guitar stores is just baby oil with lemon scent and color, which does NOTHING to maintain your fingerboard. In the worst case, it will mix with the oils in the wood, then evaporate, leaving the fretboard completely dry. At its best, it will make the fretboard shiny for a week, and nothing more. Trust me on this.
What you need is some Ed Boyle Fret Doctor. I got a bottle myself, and it works a thousand times better than lemon oil. One treatment has made my fretboards conditioned and healthy for over a month! Order it from http://www.beafifer.com/boredoctor.htm and dont look back. Its really cheap, too!
-Erlend
HamerPlyr said:Lemon oil, just like you would a rosewood fingerboard. You should be more aware of the condition of ebony because it's a harder wood than rosewood. If ebony dries out too much, it'll crack. When ever it looks like it might be thirsty (a little dry, or pale in color compared to its normal appearance), give it a little drink of the lemon oil.
Zerberus said:Sorry, but I have to call BS here.... most popular lemon oils or "fretboard conditioners" such as Kyser's "Lem oil" or Stella-Harmony Lemon oil are almost pure lemongrass oil, which is chemically about as close to perfect as it gets for this application... I have no idea where this myth originally started (it´s been around for ages), probably from some douche putting Lemon Pledge on his guitar and trying to cover it up with a lie....
...
Absana said:should I be feeding my guitars :|!?
Zerberus said:Sorry, but I have to call BS here.... most popular lemon oils or "fretboard conditioners" such as Kyser's "Lem oil" or Stella-Harmony Lemon oil are almost pure lemongrass oil, which is chemically about as close to perfect as it gets for this application... I have no idea where this myth originally started (it´s been around for ages), probably from some douche putting Lemon Pledge on his guitar and trying to cover it up with a lie....
Erlend_G said:I would NEVER use lemon oil on ANY fretboard.
The reason for that is that the "lemon oil" you get in guitar stores is just baby oil with lemon scent and color, which does NOTHING to maintain your fingerboard. In the worst case, it will mix with the oils in the wood, then evaporate, leaving the fretboard completely dry. At its best, it will make the fretboard shiny for a week, and nothing more. Trust me on this.
What you need is some Ed Boyle Fret Doctor. I got a bottle myself, and it works a thousand times better than lemon oil. One treatment has made my fretboards conditioned and healthy for over a month! Order it from http://www.beafifer.com/boredoctor.htm and dont look back. Its really cheap, too!
-Erlend
JacksonMIA said:It definitely could if your conditioner is a solvent and your frets were glued into oversized slots. Why you're conditioning your fretboard with solvent I don't know, though.
I'm not sure if it will hurt it otherwise.
Zerberus said:Sorry, but I have to call BS here.... most popular lemon oils or "fretboard conditioners" such as Kyser's "Lem oil" or Stella-Harmony Lemon oil are almost pure lemongrass oil, which is chemically about as close to perfect as it gets for this application... I have no idea where this myth originally started (it´s been around for ages), probably from some douche putting Lemon Pledge on his guitar and trying to cover it up with a lie....
While I haven´t used the Fret doctor / Bore doctor, you and others swear by it, and it does make a good impression. Certainly something to try some day...
Sludgenutz said:Fret Doctor works for me! Seeing this stuff penetrate a dense fretboard like ebony is nothing short of miraculous. This stuff disappears on a dry rosewood fretboard in a short time.
Erlend is using this stuff on fretless electric bass, so the application he is using on is more critical than most from a players perspective, I suppose.
If people want to call BS, fine. My fretboards are definitley better off by using this product.
![]()
UCSDBoy said:true, but on the other hand, all those strats and LPs survived from the 50s without the benefit of Fret Doctor... =)