Used Fret Doctor on the new Washburn fret board and WOW!

Ascension

Well-known member
When I first got the guitar and opened the case I thought it had a maple board at first. The Brazilian Rosewood fretboard was so dry it was bleached out and almost blond. This is the second of the old Washburn USA MG guitars that had been stored in the case for many years I have seen this with. The tone was also a little hars and plinky. After a couple coats of Fret Doctor the color came back and the tone warmed up a bit. This stuff is amazing and have saved a few guitars with it. Here is a before and after photo of the neck and Fret board. It's much more dramatic in person a change than the photos show though. Before and after the Fret Doctor.
 

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Ummmm...what's Fret Doctor?
This stuff. https://doctorsprod.com/products/fret-doctor
Saved several guitars over the years with super dry fretboards bridges ect with it. The MG 132FR fretboard is just the latest example.
The most extreme was my 93 Carvin DC 127 in solid tung oil KOA. It was a pawn shop rescue from a shop that I once worked in. Guitar sat on the rack for several years and was absolutely filthy when I got it. When I got in home and cleaned it up, the ebony fret board was just encrusted in junk. After I got it cleaned up, I noticed the grain had opened because the board was so dry straight up the neck and between the frets. Thought it was going to be a major issue but tried the boar Oil in Fret Doctor and over a couple of days kept applying a light coat and letting it soak in. Now I still have the guitar and dare you to find a crack in this board. Have had similar experiences several times over the years with other guitars.
Nothing else I have ever found comes even close in extreme cases to what this stuff can do!
The difference in the MG 132 FR in appearance of the fretboard is shocking from before and after
 
Never had a fretboard get so dry that I could hear any tonal difference from oiling it!

Fretdoctor sounds like good stuff, but it seems pretty expensive for what it is. Recently, I had some leftover Howard's Wax N'Feed from polishing some furniture, and have started using it on my rosewood/ebony fretboards. It's really good for that purpose (seems to last forever, doesn't leave any residue behind, no silicone stuff in it) and is very cheap compared to guitar specific formulations. You just need a tiny bit on a rag, wipe it on and wipe it off after ten minutes . . . so the 1/4 bottle of Howard's I've got should last me the rest of my life.
 
Never had a fretboard get so dry that I could hear any tonal difference from oiling it!

Fretdoctor sounds like good stuff, but it seems pretty expensive for what it is. Recently, I had some leftover Howard's Wax N'Feed from polishing some furniture, and have started using it on my rosewood/ebony fretboards. It's really good for that purpose (seems to last forever, doesn't leave any residue behind, no silicone stuff in it) and is very cheap compared to guitar specific formulations. You just need a tiny bit on a rag, wipe it on and wipe it off after ten minutes . . . so the 1/4 bottle of Howard's I've got should last me the rest of my life.
What makes Fret Doctor different is that it was created not for guitars but for restoration of Historic woodwind instruments by a chemist. Things like revolutionary War fifes etc. In that usage an instrument would be immersed or filled with boar oil and allowed to soak. It restores the Natural oils to the wood and allows it to re-expand naturally to seal cracks where the grain has opened due to drying out. You also can't over oil with it unless you get really crazy with it like ypu can with many other products. The wood will absorb what it needs then the rest will stay on the top to be wiped away. On a board being so dry it affects tone have only seen maybe 5 or 6 over the years. 2 of these US Washburns, the 93 Carvin and a couple of others. Both of the Washburns were essentially NOS guitars that had been stored unplayed for 20 to 30 years. The Carvin had been on the rack grossly over priced for over 5 years at a Pawn Shop I once worked in. Folks would pick it up play it then set it back on the rack. The guitar was absolutely filthy. This is a product that for many years I have used regularly to help restore pawn shop rescue guitars. I have tried many other products and so far have never seen anything like this stuff. It prevents things like Fret sprout from a board shrinking as it dries out. It's also non toxic and I have used on things like my cutting boards that I use for food prep to prevent them from drying out and cracking. Every guitar I own gets the board cleaned and oiled every year or so. Tjis is one of the reasons guitars that I have gigged regularly are so nice as its part of my regular maitenece scedule. Have used this stuff for over 20 years and am now on only my second bottle. The first bottle finally started drying up and had gotten a little odor so I threw it out and replaced it with a new bottle. You don't use much if you use it right so the expense is lower than you think.
 
All chemicals are created by chemists
Kinda in their job description

:)

I use lemon oil (furniture oil)
Created by a chemist for the same purpose
To rehydrate wood furniture. And works great for guitars and fretboards
 
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