Swirl Marks

gemil

New member
HI

Does anyone here worry about Swirl Marks on there guitar?

By swirl marks i mean marks that you can only see if you hold it up to a really bright light and look really close
 
Re: Swirl Marks

nope.. it is inevitable that you will get swirl marks..


but, you could get a swirl remover and buff em out
 
Re: Swirl Marks

gemil said:
By swirl marks i mean marks that you can only see if you hold it up to a really bright light and look really close

Don't bother---it's a guitar, not a work of art; play it and make some art. BTW---you can see brush marks on the Mona Lisa as well...
 
Re: Swirl Marks

ES350 said:
Don't bother---it's a guitar, not a work of art; play it and make some art. BTW---you can see brush marks on the Mona Lisa as well...

:laugh2:

:bigok:
 
Re: Swirl Marks

Some patience...

I guess so, but what's the point? They'll come back sooner or later...
 
Re: Swirl Marks

Take a little gander at the literature on tribology---the study of friction and wear patterns. Polishing is just creating a lot more smaller whorls...in a real sense, the surface is actually rougher. You will be tempted to look at the surface under a 20x power lens to find even more swirls...
 
Re: Swirl Marks

skynrdlover - you might ask over on the ReRanch forum.

3M Imperial Hand Glaze might be a good start - very mild
3M also makes Swirl Mark Remover - but that's more aggressive and you would probably need to polish/buff afterward

PLEASE check w/ ReRanch folks before trying this!

Personally, I'd leave it alone. I noticed a bunch of tiny scratches on the back of my Warmoth strat today and decided they just show it's been played and loved ;)

Chip
 
Re: Swirl Marks

Leave 'em. Like others said, they'll just come back eventually. I like fine scratches and wear marks THAT I PUT THERE from playing. I think it adds character. I can't wait for some of my black ESP's to get worn down to the wood. Major MOJO.

Guitars are made to be played. Hang a picture of a guitar on a wall if all your gonna do is stare at it...
 
Re: Swirl Marks

Everytime I use swirl remover it makes my guitar look worse:( . After seeing Yngwies beat up guitars, the worn look suddenly became cool to me. In fact Im going to beat up my cheapy Ibanez on purpose. The nice flamed top one is still babied however:fing2: .
 
Re: Swirl Marks

I can totally appreciate the desire to want your guitar to look perfect.

However, look at all the major guitar gods out there and what their main axes look like. For example, check out Steve Vai's web site and look at his main guitar EVO. Talk about a beat up instrument, but he loves the tone out of it.

For a next guitar, you could look at a natural wood look with a rubbed oil finish. You won't get swirl marks, and if it got any scratches or nicks, you can just lightly sand it away, and rub more oil on it and it looks like new.

Best of luck.
 
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