What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

bryan the rocker

New member
Hi guys,

1) What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars ?

Nitro, Poly finishes

2) What products do you apply on your Guitar's Fretboard ?




Also

Anyone tried the

Dunlop Bodygloss 65 Cream of Carnauba Wax,

Is it in a Spray bottle ? (Spray it on your guitar)

or is it in Cream form ( Lotion form, which you apply on the guitar )

Is it any good ?

I am not an Employee of Dunlop doing a survey, ok :D

Just buying Polishes online.


thanks for the replies.
 
Last edited:
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

I generally use Pledge. Yeah I know a lot of people are gonna say that's furniture polish..... Well if it was good enough for Jimmy D'Aquisto, it's good enough for me! I have use all kinds of polishes.... when I have serious arm mark on my black guitars I have a Fender product called haze & swirl remover that I use. I have also used Caruba wax and quite honestly the Pledge does just as good of a job. I only thoroughly wax the guitar when I change strings. I usually just wipe it down when I am done playing. During a Gig I wipe it down in many cases after each song (depending on how much I am sweating that night) then do a complete cleaning when I get home.

As far as fingerboards; I use pledge or polish on maple and again just wipe it down with a cloth when it needs it, when I change strings (I remove them all) I buff the frets with 00000 steel wool (taping off the fingerboard when necessary) and I use Pure Lemon oil on Rosewood & ebony. Occasionally I use a 3M Cleaner wax for medium oxidation if the guitar is really messy, but mine are never that bad.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

the absolute best wax I've used is Gerlitz #1 Carnauba
check their other products as well, such as guitar honey, or go for the package deal
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

I use Ken Smith polish, and Old English, lemon oil on fret boards.


Sprinter
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

cant go wrong with gerlitz! i use GHS guitar gloss for my guitar bodies. Its not a wax technically, which is a good thing! i recommend using it instead something more traditional like carnuba wax or whatever. IMO it lets the guitar breathe more but i may be talking out of my ass

for my fretboard i use gerlitz guitar honey. all my boards are rosewood or ebony and it does WONDERS for the rosewood boards. not sure if i like it for ebony...since the wood is so tight grained it doesnt absorb as well at the rosewood, and the honey seems to leave a sort of haze on the ebony board.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

For polishing the guitar body I use whatever I happen to grab at the local music shop. For fretboards, I've tried a number of products including olive oil, walnut oil and lemon oil. I don't really care for lemon oil because it adds a yellowish hue to the wood (not so much on dark woods, but I don't care for it nonetheless). I've finally settled on a Minwax product that works great! It's called Replenishing Oil and is used for oil finished furniture. A pure oil that is cheap ($7 for a pint) and does a fabulous job.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

Remember that a slightly damp clean rag, followed by a soft dry cloth will remove 99.9% of the junk collecting on your guitar. Water is great stuff.

If you have a finish that you are trying to restore, then the Virtuoso Cleaner followed by the Virtuoso Polish is the way to go. The Cleaner will remove fine scratches and oxidation. Careful with the Cleaner; apply as directed because you can damage a NCL finish if you rub too hard too long. I used this on a new Historic VOS Les Paul I bought and it left a beautiful finish. Leaves a great shine. Got a guitar with a sticky neck? Try this two step process and you may be amazed. It actually seemed to harden the lacquer--and the stickiness went away. And stayed gone.

One Les Paul I bought used last year probably hadn't been cleaned since the original owner purchased it. He was trying to sell a guitar with a Blue Book value of $2800 but couldn't get any takers because the guitar was in such poor condition. I was able to able to get the guitar from him for about $1700. I thoroughly cleaned the guitar, and used the Virtuoso products to restore the finish. Now, I'm not selling the guitar because it is a great guitar; but I recently had the guitar in a local store showing it off, and another customer saw the guitar and wanted to buy it--for $3000!! That's $1300 for an hour of my time and some elbow grease and some TLC! Moral: Take good care of your gear!
____________


The Dunlop 65 Carnauba is a cream and good for maintaining and protecting finishes. Ditto for the Planet Waves Carnauba. A carnauba wax product like the Dunlop 65 can help protect your maple fingerboard and delay it from wearing down to the wood. It's a very hard wax, and leaves a great shine. It will protect from various environment pollutants.

The Gerlitz is a soft paste. I've stopped using the Gerlitz on my NCL finishes--but I think it works great on poly finishes. BTW, Taylors are poly finished, and they recommend Turtle Wax. (I wouldn't use the TW on a guitar with a NCL finish, though--too abrasive!!)

Guitar Honey is a good product for a RW or ebony board. Many folks like bore oil. The guys on the Les Paul Forum have a product they like called Fret Doctor--and it is bore oil. Lemon oil is good, you can get it from Dunlop. They also have a kit that has their fretboard Cleaner and a Fretboard Conditioner (an oil), it works very well too.

I also use some spray polishes: The Martin pump is a good one, I like the Dunlop 65 spray and the Love Potion #9 polish. The Dunlop will remove wax, so keep that in mind. The Love Potion #9 smells great!

Preservation Polish from Stew-Mac is guaranteed to have no silicones (which can be hard to remove from a finish). Duck's AX WAX is another interesting product that can be used on the body, AND fretboard--and they claim it's a good string cleaner, too! I have not tried these, so can't vouch for them.

I would never use Pledge on a guitar. It's too soft, and it will leave a build-up. I love Howard's Orange Oil on my furniture, but it's a little too heavy for my fretboards.

I think the Dunlop 65 Cleaning Kit with the Spray Polish, Carnauba, String Cleaner, Fretboard Cleaner and the Fretboard Condition, fret buffing patch, and a micro-fiber polishing cloth is a good place to start and a good value. Add the Virtuoso Cleaner and Polish if you have a guitar with a heavily oxidized finish; or to gloss-up a satin finish, or remove the gritty component on a Gibson VOS finish.

Good luck!

Bill
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

lizard spit on the fretboard, and either just a rag on the body, or sometimes a guy's polish he made and sold through his music store in AZ; don't know what's in it, but works well. yeah I know - probably not smart to use something that's unknown, but I like it. would have to find the bottle to remember the name though.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

Lemon oil on my rosewood boards, window cleaner on the bodies
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

wax is the only one that won't react with poly or nitro. Pledge can eat up poly and some of the polishes have silicon which leaves a film on nitro. I use an auto micro mesh cloth to clean. It works great on hand grease and dirt. I use lemon oil only on the rosewood.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

Pure carnauba car wax on the fins without any grit in the cleaner. The product I use is called "Beats Um All". I found out about it at the Birmingham World of Wheels. Cleans well but has no abrasive and is super easy to use. There is a reason guys were using this stuff on 20K custom paint work. That + it's the absolute best stuff on the planet to use for swirl free pure DEEP black !!
On the fretboard I use Fret Doctor. When i bought my NOS 1993 MG 104 from a dealer in Florida the rosewood fretboard was so dry it was almost bleached white. the tone of the guitar was harsh and brittle and I was afraid it would crack. A couple of rounds with this stuff brought the color and tone right back to where it should be!! Lemon oil is nothing but mineral spirits with a lemon scent and will do NOTHING to restore the color and tone on a really dry board. I buy and sell a lot of guitars and ONLY use this stuff!!!
http://www.beafifer.com/boredoctor.htm
Before and after photos from the Les Paul forum using Fret Doctor
http://www.mylespaul.com/forums/custom-shop/6695-fret-doctor-before-after-pictures.html
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

beer, sweat, and jack daniels. maybe a little of whatever else some one else sloshes on the guitar too.

i dont polish them unless there is a photo shoot or something but carnuba wax works well and i like the vitruoso cleaner and polish as well.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

i almost never polish my guitars. only if ive just done some work on it or something.

i use lizard spit products all the way, purely for the name...i dont think they are better than anything else, lol.
 
Re: What polishes, waxes do you use on your guitars

I don't get how Pledge can hurt a guitar but not a dining room table! All these manufacturers are buying the lacquer from the same manufacturer so how is a guitar any different! As I said earlier I am not waxing it every day I only clean the guitar maybe once every 2 to 3 months. The rest of the time I am just wiping it down with a cloth. Polish is polish IMHO!! I wouldn't be a bit surprised if the stuff you are buying in the music stores is made in the same place other polish is. Different label & a different price. Doesn't Mcguire make Fender's polish? Is it made different then the stuff they put in their bottles? Who knows and quite honestly who cares. I use Pledge because I always have it (not to say I don't use others as well) and it makes the guitars nice and shiny just like my living room furniture!
 
Last edited:
Back
Top