J De Rocher wrote:
EDIT: Hey, what happened to Hesh's post about how bad waterborne finishes are and how great nitro is that this post was in response too?
Actually, the nitro on the Martin I bought brand new in 1992 at Elderly in Lansing failed on the face of the headstock. It blistered and pealed right off. Note that headstocks don't receive physical contact from the player like the neck and body so that failure was particularly egregious. The folks at Elderly told me that I wasn't alone in seeing that failure.
Based on my reading of posts on this subject over the past 12 years or so on multiple forums, the vast majority of water-borne finish failures occurred in the early days mainly in the 2000s and particularly with KTM9. The number of posts I've seen about finish failures tapered off dramatically in recent years as people moved to more recently developed finishes.
As far as I'm aware, nobody knows what the actual failure rates of any of the multiple water-borne finishes are. Anyone who says otherwise is just guessing.
Speaking for myself, track records like Bob's allow me to sleep just fine at night.
EDIT: I don't know how I forgot this fine example of nitro failure which is sitting right in the other room. It's a Gibson Custom Shop L-150. The finish cracked and fell out all along the front edge of the bridge about twenty years ago. After this happened, I did a web search and quickly found photos of 8 other Gibsons built within a couple years of this one with the exact same finish failure.
Attachment:
Gibson L-150 finish defect.JPG
You mean, J what happened to the post I thoughtfully wrote about intellectual honesty and breathing one's own air and then came back and deleted because I don't need the additional.... grief right now?
I lost my 92 year old Mom very recently and another friend on this forum just lost his 96 year old Dad so a few of us are struggling. I'm really struggling and decided I'll let this one go and not die on the waterborne vs. nitro debate hill. Someone once asked me here if I have to die on every hill and one of the many amazing things about me... is that I actually not only listen at times I actually hear others and take what they offer to heart. What a concept.
But to quote one of my heroes: Just when I thought I was out.... you drag me back in....
Kidding of course.
I mentioned this, my grief in my post that you read J but since you insist on bringing me back I'll get to the point.
I'm in the repair business and I see what results from the poor decisions of others especially some small builders who can't tuck their egos away at times and consider that we as Luthiers, no matter what the experience level are always, always learning and must keep an open mind.
Dave my business partner is one of the most experienced Luthiers around. He's lived this for 47 years and been professionally trained, formal apprenticeship, hundreds of guitars built and he taught Lutherie professionally to folks paying thousands to learn. He also created me
No easy task I would add.
He belongs to a Looth Group where a number of highly experienced Luthiers are on line with each other in our shops at times daily. Amazing concept and pretty cool when you consider the loneliness of the Luthier life in a single person shop. These guys have more experience than this entire forum but they still come back to learn from each other and share. They are intellectually honest and when one of them screws up they often discuss it. It's how people learn, improve and grow.
A post above I thought to be not intellectually honest. A poster blames the client for his body chemistry. News flash lots of folks have body chemistry that eats guitar finish I see it often. With nitro I rarely see it but have seen it even with nitro just less often and the results are typically not a complete failure of the finish and it falling off. Instead nitro will lose it's luster much like when someone has bug spray on and touches the instrument.
As builders this is the world we must build for including the folks who's body chemistry eats finish. It is the business we are in....
Servicing over 600 guitars annually personally and 1,100 our shop sees a lot of failures of the best of intentions. When someone calls and says they have a small builder instrument from so and so will we repair it we may not even agree to look at it depending on who built it. If our experience with that builder or person is that they do lousy work we do not want to get any on us and are far to busy to have to do that in terms of our opportunity costs.
On the contrary a small builder who has their stuff together we are happy to help and do when they come our way if we have openings. It's case by case with us and what we seek to avoid is called scope creep. We don't want to take in a crack repair and find the frets falling off that will push back someone else's repair.
So we see waterborne finish failures far more than we ever see nitro failures and nitro does fail at times but not nearly at the rate of waterborne.
What's the remedy for someone who purchased an instrument with a failing waterborne finish? Refinish and we don't and won't do that it's not the business we are in. This leaves those who are in this situation.... SOL unless they can find and contract with a professional refinisher.
This forum is filled with examples of waterborne finish failures and what you said J that in your opinion this was a product of the industry early on and not the case now I would push back on as well. Just as I do not know if waterborne has really, really improved over the years you don't have the data either. But we do have the reports here and most are from who I would consider credible people/members.
I also wrote if I recall correctly before I deleted my post that I had high hopes for waterborne when I was building guitars in my back bedroom with white carpet in my condo. The toxicity was on my mind and I didn't want it in my life and I am speaking of nitro.
But every time I purchased hard shellac (not waterborne I know but a raved about alternative finish that was not ready for prime time either...) or KTM9 and tooled up to shoot it someone posted on the OLF about it falling off or having a blue tint or, or, or. Body chemistry and waterborne seemed to be a common complaint.
So it got a bad name here and I was unwilling to shoot it.
As for nitro failing J it does and I'll one up your swing at nitro and invoke Rick Turner RIP who was very personally interested in nitro reaching 80 - 100 years old. He believed that it's going to flake off and completely fail at that age and some of his predictions are coming true we can see now with time. Shellac seems to be holding up a century out better than nitro as Rick predicted.
But for most players, most body chemistry nitro is far more durable to the ravages of Smoke On the Water and beer bottles flying across the stage than waterborne and always has been. This is pretty indisputable and evidenced by not a single example of a major manufacturer concerned with warranty claims using waterborne finish.
Let me repeat this: Not a single major guitar manufacture uses waterborne finishes
So J I tried to stay out of this you brought me back. We disagree and I would add the word strongly here. Waterborne finish has not demonstrated to me that it's ready for prime time and I am far from alone. I'll add that when a finish does fail it's not like a loose fret that can be repaired - it's a disaster and a crying shame for a client and to be avoided at ALL costs.