Juan Estruch Guitarra Blue Label

Frhout- RE: What strings do the big names use? 12 2007 22:04:57) When I started guitar, I used La Bella flamenco red nylon. I managed to get the Juan Martin D'Addario flamenco strings (black nylon) which, and I quote from his book 'definitely give a flamenco sound even to a dull sounding guitar'. Stringed musical instruments. An old flamenco juan estruch guitar of the mid 70's is presently for sale in a guitar shop near Rambla.

Thats great info and explains certain projects I've had in recently.Dunlop has silicone.I will never buy a guitar from any shop that uses it.We need to check on the Virtuoso and Petros. Everyone should get this straight right now. Silicone doesn't eat the finish. It makes it so that nitro will never stick properly to that area. That means no repairs or refinish that will hold.It should also void the Finish Warranty.Also Maquires no 3 wax has silicone so don't finish up with that.Very bad news. Hold on just a minute.

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After reading Sean's post I went in to Mythbusters mode. I drenched a scrap neck with Dunlop 65 polish, wiped off the excess not too carefully, loaded up a brush with McFadden lacquer, and laid on a thick patch about an inch square. It dried to a lovely, even film.

No trace of crawling, no fisheye. It dried perfectly.When you say 'silicone is very bad for Martins' do you know what you are talking about? Silicone has no effect on the finished surface, it just makes it difficult (but not impossible) to get new lacquer to adhere in an even film.I see no problem with Dunlop 65 polish in this regard.Greg MirkenShade Tree Fretted Instrument RepairSan Juan Capistrano, California. I too contacted Dunlop long ago and was told that the polish contained 'very small' quantities of silicone 'less than 5%'. I mailed them back (have to say I got a fast polite response) and said that I didn't think 5% was a very small amount!However, there is really no argument, silicone will form a very very thin film on a finish, that is very difficult to remove completely (in spite of several solvents), and WILL intrude between the original surface and anything that is put on it, including glues and finish. By its nature, things do not like adhering to it. The fact that a lacquer will flow well on to it, and dry, says nothing about future adhesion, unfortunately.

I personally do not believe silicone will harm a guitar (Martin or anything else) if it is being put on to a sound finish, no cracks or gaps. It will, however, migrate into any gaps, however small, and can compromise existing glues/finishes that way. The main thing is, it makes working on the guitar in the future potentially very difficult.

Repairs that include gluing or finishing may easily be compromised and any repair folks hate working on guitars so affected. Just my thoughts.Roger. Greg,I'm a professional finisher.If silicone gets into any wood or unfinished area you'd have a massive problem.Did you attempt to rub out the brushed lacquer?With antiques and antique instruments, what you'll find is the polluted area will continually fisheye. Sometimes misting on nitro will eventually leach out the silicone and you can get adhesion. Sometimes a small repair will turn into a huge repair and eat many hours.so if I react to having silicone its due to hundreds of projects that went way over schedule and created havoc with the item.If you mostly work with finishes on fresh wood you wouldn't run into this as much as I do. I have also used the Dunlop 65 polish over the last year or so. I haven't seen any adverse affects yet but have not had to have either of the guitar's finishes worked on.

I have been very careful to use it and make sure all is wiped off clean with clean cloths before setting the guitar down.I hope this thread continues because if there's questions of future problems, I will, without hesitation, switch to the Martin polish.As a matter of fact, perhaps I'll do that anyway.Page 63 in the introduction thread2005 Martin HD-28V2003 Taylor 455ce2005 Martin M3M1999 Seagull S6My boat2/3 of my hair. The problem with many products is that they make the instrument shine and look so nice, but if a repair is ever needed to be done it comes back to haunt you. I have heard many say that they are not that concerned about ever needing a finish repair, UNTIL it happens to them.

I used to own a couple of Gibson electrics so I got hooked on Gibson Pump Polish, which I bet is basically the same as the Martin polish. I use the polish very sparingly, about once a year. Aside from that I blow on the surface and then wipe with a soft cotton cloth. The moisture from your breath is usually enough to allow the removal of fingerprints etc. Now, if someone just ate fried Chicken and then played your guitar, Naphtha might be needed, but there again, who is going to allow actual grease get on their Martin except on very rare occasions.See, I just saved you a chunk of money, you need not buy Dunlop 65 or Virtuoso to clean your guitar, so just send me the money you saved, if enough do this I could get that 000-15S I so crave 'There's no money above the the 5th fret' - Charles Sawtelle, Expert. I think it's totally outrageous for a store to apply silicone-containing polish to new guitars, and agree that 5% is way beyond a 'small amount.'

But Greg's findings are experimental fact and can't be ignored. And there's a really interesting aspect to this.I've shared the experience, with many others, of trying to make lacquer repairs to an instrument with residual silicone on it. Further, years ago I worked with a coatings research scientist and asked him how to remove silicone. He said forget it, there is no way.Then I heard of 'fish-eye prevention,' and on reading everything I could on that subject, read that the fish-eye control product worked by adding a little silicone to the finishing material. (I never learned whether there was a fish-eye prevention product claimed to work with nitrocellulose lacquer.) Anyway, the story was that applying this small amount of silicone in the new finish made it compatible with the silicone residue.Now I wonder if Greg's experimental procedure actually left enough silicone on the freshly-waxed surface that it was sufficient to act as a fish-eye preventative when new finish was applied. I know if I had to deal with one of those residual silicone contamination problems right now, I'd certainly try applying this Dunlop 65 polish as Greg described, to see if it worked a miracle. Ok I am wondering too.

I have a brand new D-18V and I don't want to use the wrong stuff on this thing. This will be my sons guitar one day and I want to give it to him in the best condition I can for him to have it many years after I am long gone. I haven't used any kind of polish on it yet. But I do have the Martin guitar polish in a white pump bottle (look at the picture below. That is what I have).Is this stuff what I should be using or not?This stuff doesn't have a list of contents on the bottle except for saying it has Mineral oil and castor oil in it.Thanks. WaveRay, you will never see any adverse effects of using silicone because there are none. On the other hand, if there is already silicone contamination on your guitar it's too late to switch to a silicone-free polish.

Once a surface is contaminated, it's next to impossible to remove all traces of the stuff. The only person who cares about this is the repairman down the road who tries to do a lacquer touchup on the guitar.After 30+ years of being a professional instrument repairer, I've seen surfaces contaminated with everything you can imagine. I can spot silicone across the street, and I know exactly how it behaves. On my test piece, there was no sign of silicone contamination.

I don't have to rub it out to tell. I will call Dunlop today and repeat my test on some other pieces, with other batches of lacquer.To other repairmen: repeat my test and report what happens. If the stuff causes a problem, we all need to know!Greg MirkenShade Tree Fretted Instrument RepairSan Juan Capistrano, California.

Juan Estruch Guitarra Blue Labeled

OK I just had Dunlop FAX me the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) for this product and it shows that the product has Dimethicone in it. In fact it is one of only four main ingredients (water being one of them).Then I did a search for Dimethicone online, and WIKIpedia shows it can be several types of Silicone Oils.Read the WiKipedia definition for Dimethicone here.I'm not a scientist or chemist. But it looks kinda like it does have some sort of Silicone Oil in it!! It may be way more than 5% too since it is one of the main ingredients.Can you guys tell me if it is safe to use the Martin Polish I posted a pic of above?

Nov 23, 2018 - Preface. This sentence was made by Google translation. Please forgive even if my grammar is wrong. ###warning### This file is Not a MOD. New Aug 9, 2014 - More specifically, A hard-hittin' single shot revolver. “Weapon mods can increase ammunition capacity and damage, reduce spread and weight, or add special equipment like scopes.”— Fallout: New Vegas. Jan 23, 2015 - One of the Guns of Deschain! For my first Fallout mod I decided to try and make one of Roland Deschain's revolvers from Stephen King's The.

American indie pop group The Ocean Blue have got all the jangly guitar goodness you’d expect from a band formed in 1986. Re-issuing their 2004 EP Waterworks this month with three added tracks, the band tour to promote the release this fall. Made up of David Schelzel on lead vocals and guitar, Oed Ronne on key, guitar and vocals, Bobby Mittan on bass and Peter Anderson on drums the release also includes collaborations with some of the band’s friends, including Jim Ruiz and Allen Clapp.Known for covering the likes of The Smiths and New Order in their live performances, their sound is very much influenced by them too.

“Fast Forward Reverse” opens the album with a synthy, dreamy track, which acts as a slow and short introduction. This leads seamlessly into “Pedestrian” which carries on the slow, dream state with Schelzel’s vocals pulling you in over the ambient noise. The track builds up with guitar and drums and he sings “I saw you last night, alone in your car, it wasn’t quite right, your headlights were out”.“Golden Gate”, an ode to San Francisco sounds much more folk inspired, like it came straight from the sixties.

Juan Estruch Guitarra Blue Label 2017

“Ticket to Wyoming” is an optimistic track with blasts of electric guitar between the softly sung vocals; “I know your daddy didn’t like me, he said I wasn’t up to any good, so I hightailed it to Wyoming ‘cos I could”. The next track on Waterworks is equally as positive, “Sunshower” before “The Northern Jetstream” brings a more contemplative feel. The longest track on the album, the song really builds and builds, layers of guitar and “do do dos” in the introduction.The last three tracks are the recently added ones. “Golden Girl” and “Can’t Let Go” were written around the same time, but were never finished properly or released until now. Steady, thoughtful and at the same time catchy, they are certainly worth buying the new release for.

“Take a Broken Heart” is a cover of Rick Nelson’s song, with Ronne on vocals it is a stunning end to a re-vitalized release from The Ocean Blue. My name is Charles Brownstein and I was born in Montreal, Quebec. I presently live in Vancouver, BC.I am a true lover of music, food, books, film, and stand-up comedy.

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Foremost it is music that I love, that is what drove me to create this site. I confess to liking Duran Duran and the Bee gees in my youth.I prefer In Utero to Nevermind and safe as milk instead of Trout Mask Replica.Northern Transmissions is a Music website that features interviews from musicians and bands we love. We have interviewed so many of them, from The Drums to Destroyer. We review albums by from many labels around the world, including Merge, Sub pop, Bella union, Matador, 4AD, Rough Trade, Capture Tracks, Hardly Art, and many many more.Hope you guys enjoy the website as much as we like working on it.