Zen Guitar wrote:This is totally normal with nitro finishes. Especially modern nitro which seems to have more/different plasticizers than in day of old (hence the check resistance compared to vintage). As the guitar gets a little older and the nitro cures, the finish will harden up and you'll have a lot less issue with this. I wouldn't suggest doing anything to it, just play it--when it feels gummy, wipe it down, then resume playing. When my EJ Strat was brand new--pretty much straight off the line (you could really smell the nitro)--I had this issue. A year later, it was all but gone. My R9 Lester was also straight off the line (custom for me) and the nitro was still soft. Months later, same deal--feels fine. Most of the gumminess is gone. If it gets gummy, a quick wipe down and I'm good to go.
If you do polish your neck, be sure and double check that the polish you use doesn't react with the nitro finish. A lot of polishes actually do. Avoid Dunlop Formula 65, PRS Polish (not the cleaner), and some others. I have Virtuoso polish and have also used Novus 1 (a plastics cleaner that works great) without issue. Besides not wanting the polish/cleaner to react with the nitro, you really don't want to use anything that will build up over time (otherwise you eventually have to strip that muck off).
Sound like you have an awesome guitar... Enjoy it!
Cheers,
-Matt
How will using say PRS polish and other react. That is what happens to the guitar?
Cheers ron
"Joe B saved my soul, forever grateful Ron"
"Some people dream of worthy accomplishments while others stay awake and do them"
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