Jet-Jaguar
Hero Member
- Messages
- 515
So, after reading many forum posts on shielding, I thought "why not shield my guitar? It may not doing anything, but it couldn't hurt." I was going to go with conductive tape, but decided on conductive paint instead because that's what they do at the high-end shop. My thoughts after the experience:
* It smells bad. Not as bad a solder, but bad. On the good side, it's water-soluble.
* The stuff I got was from Stew-mac. I expected to just do it in a day, but according to the instructions on the can, you're supposed to do at least three coats, with 24 hours between coats.
* I'm not sure why, but it seems like it smears much more so than normal paint. At first, I just used a few strips of masking tape, but ended up covering the whole guitar to keep from getting it everywhere. Having lots of paper towels helps.
* Speaking of masking tape, I used the "medium" tacky masking tape (the blue kind that is actually meant for painting.) I think I should have used the "light" kind instead, because it left a little bit of residue on the guitar.
* This is not in the instructions, but I found that once the final coat was dry, I had to wipe the insides with a dry paper towel, because otherwise touching it was like touching a pencil lead, and left dark smears on my hand.
* The dark smears on my hands led to dark smears on the body of the guitar. Still need to clean this up.
* Another reason I went with conductive paint instead of conductive tape is that I had a rear-routed body, and I thought I needed to use paint to ground out the pickup cavities. You know, to go through the wire holes. I later watched the "How to Wire a Fender Guitar" DVD (also from Stew Mac) and in the Telecaster section, the instructor uses conductive tape, and he establishes ground through the wire holes by wrapping the pickup wires with the conductive tape. Watching that was a "duh" moment for me. Should have watched it BEFORE shielding.
Anyway, that's my story. I haven't used conductive tape yet, but I might in the future, instead of the paint. Just seems easier.
* It smells bad. Not as bad a solder, but bad. On the good side, it's water-soluble.
* The stuff I got was from Stew-mac. I expected to just do it in a day, but according to the instructions on the can, you're supposed to do at least three coats, with 24 hours between coats.
* I'm not sure why, but it seems like it smears much more so than normal paint. At first, I just used a few strips of masking tape, but ended up covering the whole guitar to keep from getting it everywhere. Having lots of paper towels helps.
* Speaking of masking tape, I used the "medium" tacky masking tape (the blue kind that is actually meant for painting.) I think I should have used the "light" kind instead, because it left a little bit of residue on the guitar.
* This is not in the instructions, but I found that once the final coat was dry, I had to wipe the insides with a dry paper towel, because otherwise touching it was like touching a pencil lead, and left dark smears on my hand.
* The dark smears on my hands led to dark smears on the body of the guitar. Still need to clean this up.
* Another reason I went with conductive paint instead of conductive tape is that I had a rear-routed body, and I thought I needed to use paint to ground out the pickup cavities. You know, to go through the wire holes. I later watched the "How to Wire a Fender Guitar" DVD (also from Stew Mac) and in the Telecaster section, the instructor uses conductive tape, and he establishes ground through the wire holes by wrapping the pickup wires with the conductive tape. Watching that was a "duh" moment for me. Should have watched it BEFORE shielding.
Anyway, that's my story. I haven't used conductive tape yet, but I might in the future, instead of the paint. Just seems easier.