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  • seems like I tried paste wax.,too messy.,..,i stick with Zinsser Amber Shellac or Krylon black spray paint on Oak.,.,years ago I used vegetable oil in a pinch, but in my old age I would not recommend it.,.,gums up over time.,.,. I have used the oils on Rosewood or Ebony with good results..,. 

  • I like a Minwax product,  which is their paste "finishing wax"  -  after frets are in,  I can just rub it in with a rag.  It dries hard,  not sticky at all,  and therefore does not attract dirt/dust.

  • Thanks to all of you for your replies. Lots of help. I have a couple of CBG goof-ups that I may try the Feed-N-Wax on, just for fun, but I believe I will pretty much change to Lemon Oil. Does anyone know if Gitty glues the frets on their fret-boards?

    • Hi, If the slots are correct size for the fret tang I would not think it is a requirement to glue in frets on a narrow flat board.

      I glue in frets on a wider radiused board. I don't know what Gitty does though, it does add a bit of time to the fretting process.

      Taff

  • I use organoil hard burnishing oil, a tung oil preparation. 

    When I visited the Kamaka ukulele factory they used Whatco Danish oil. 

    Generally any light finishing oil will suffice though try to minimise the use of oils that may contaminate your strings. Always buff as much of the oil off as you can and give it a bit of time in the sun to really kick off the hardening. Especially if using steel strings.

    • Just a couple of things I would like to mention on this subject.

      Its often been suggested in the past on the forum that wax it not a good medium to use as it attracts dirt and dust. It may depend on how it is applied or the type of wax, because I have not experienced the problem in over 30 years of cleaning and treating customers fingerboards with a wax.

      As part of my service, no matter what the repair, I always polish the frets and clean and treat the fingerboard. In all those years that's a lot of fingerboards getting waxed. Never a problem. 

      How much do I apply? Well if I say I've used the same can of teak wax 750gms in all that time might give an indication.

      I recon I apply far less than a runny liquid or spray does. People that use excess treatments get charged more for their refrets due to the extra work it can create.

      Taff

  • I like using lemmon oil
    • Beware, most lemon oil is artificial lemon & yellow coloring? Not good if your neck has binding? Plus your fretboard doesn’t need artificial colors or chemicals that can lift frets/ binding. Food grade mineral oil & pure linseed oil is best? Pure linseed is hard to find, most boiled linseed has solvents in it FYI, you don’t want solvents on your fret board? Also tung oil is for furniture, not guitars, there’s a few different petroleum solvents used as penetrators in tung oil? Better off using something recommended by the guitar manufacturers, they’ve done all the research, they know what works best? 

      • Your last point is exactly why I use D'Addario 'Planet Waves' lemon oil Brian...…I've used their stuff, including strings, for years. As well as many other useful items of hardware etc, they do a really good set of 3 stage polish's too, if you like polishing....

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  • Only drawback is wax tends to trap dirt in with it? So maybe something with less wax, like Tru-oil?

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