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Wenge Baritone Neck Disappointment 😢

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Just received my neck and it feels super rough, raised grain and it looks to be patchy sapwood not the dark, oily tight grained wenge I requested. When I run my finger along it feels like I could get splinters. Super bummed has anyone had this with a wenge neck? I'm looking at finishing it with Rubio monocoat dark roast oil to even out what looks to be moisture patches and hopefully darken it all up a bit more. Will sanding and oil finishing sort this or should I be contacting Warmoth? Any advice appreciated
 

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I’m probably not adding much value, but what an interesting piece of wood. I hope someone chimes in who can help. I saw a Reddit post where someone just claimed we he is splinter, but then I read something and they said it can be like ice.
 
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In general if there is something you are not happy about contacting Warmoth Customer Services, ideally prior to fitting tuners etc ought to be anyone's first port of call. Perhaps try contacting them in any case, though your options may now be limited.

It just looks like Wenge to me and the characteristics you describe are typical of the species, though it might not match what was expected. Wenge is open grained.

One thing possibly worth doing is "burnishing" it. See listed thread, a lot of photos are missing as it is an old thread, but the information is still useful.

 
Just received my neck and it feels super rough, raised grain and it looks to be patchy sapwood not the dark, oily tight grained wenge I requested. When I run my finger along it feels like I could get splinters. Super bummed has anyone had this with a wenge neck? I'm looking at finishing it with Rubio monocoat dark roast oil to even out what looks to be moisture patches and hopefully darken it all up a bit more. Will sanding and oil finishing sort this or should I be contacting Warmoth? Any advice appreciated
That's nice-looking Wenge, and you will definitely want to burnish it if you want the smoothest possible Wenge neck!!
The thing with with Warmoth special requests (as I understand them) is that (like 'extra-lightweight') it's all relative to their available stock of lumber.

So the neck you got might well have been the most "dark, oily tight grained wenge" that they had on hand...

Wenge can show a wide range of coloration, this is illustrated on the builder page ...
wenge.png
(wenge fretboard on wenge neck)
 
I would never have put tuners on and returned it if it bothered me

I certainly wouldn’t apply poly or sandpaper or anything else until Warmoth has a chance to get a call from you requesting a return

But I’d personally keep and burnish, maybe with some oil slurry to fill the grain.
 
Before buying a species new to you seek out that species in a production instrument first.

Schecter and Warwick have both released instruments with Wenge necks that have hit GC.

Wenge is a different animal, but it’s not for everyone. Over time, the feel gets a touch waxy in a similar way that padouk does, and while some might find that undesirable, others clamor for it.
 
no experience with Wenge and therefore suppose I’d not have expected a new wood neck of any species to look like that. But if making lemonade is the only recourse now, burnishing sounds like a good plan
 
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