|
|
Joined: December 2002 Posts: 86
Location: ma. | does adding a humidifier have any restorative benefits to a guitar that may not have had one used previously? or will it just keep the top stable/pliable from that point on. |
|
| |
|
Joined: June 2002 Posts: 147
| I have a classical guitar I bought from a guy that had it in storage for three years in Phoenix AZ. The top and back were sunk in about ¼” and it was unplayable.
After a month at 45% humidity the top and back had a 1/32” crown and it played like a new guitar. You need to study up on guitar humidity before you go messing around though. Taylor Tech Sheets is a good place to start.
Mike
Taylor Tech Sheets |
|
| |
|
Joined: November 2002 Posts: 1300
Location: Madison, Wisconsin | We have a local guitar store that will "humidify" a guitar for you. I asked them one day just how they went about doing that (with thoughts of a contraption looking similar to an iron lung or a guitar shaped pressure cooker). They put it in a room at 45% to 50% for a month or so. I wonder how they can tell when its done? :rolleyes: |
|
| |
|
Joined: January 2003 Posts: 63
Location: Virginia | They stick a fork in it.
Sorry...couldn't resist.
bd :D |
|
| |
|
Joined: May 2002 Posts: 3005
Location: Las Cruces, NM | Marketing, marketing, marketing, They're doing what you can do by putting your guitar in a case with a humidifier (read the directions). In winter, the humidity gets very low, bad for wood, even Ovation wood which is only the top. But if the top is affected by humiditity and the back isn't, stress results. I learned in college to always use "that" in place of "which", but here I've made an exception. |
|
| |