Mike Manuele wrote:
MichaelP wrote:
Surface prep prior to starting any finish is key. Hesh is right the previous spit coats sealed the top. now you have sanded back to wood to sand out a ding (should have been steamed out first then leveled the raised grain left by the steaming rather than by sanding the area to the dings level) the newly applied spit coats are sealing the bare spots but adding depth to the rest of the area therefore the refraction of light of the two different areas will vary.
One deep nick needed filling and there were sanding marks I missed. I did steam out the dings, filled the nick, sanded, raised the grain twice etc, and re-applied a spit coat to the area I sanded.
I'm not new to finishing guitars (I usually spray lacquer), just new to FP - but thanks for the advice.
Sorry Mike! But you only mentioned sanding to fix the dings so i assumed that was what you did. Even with Nitro you would have this refraction issue if you had sanded back to bare wood, resealed the sanded area and then began finishing.
Hesh is right as well about sizing the top prior to starting the finish. I will also make the top less susceptible to minor marking during the FP process.