I finished building a 000, with an EIR back, last winter. Two cracks appeared on the treble side of the back (I was spraying it when the temperature was too way low). One crack is 11" long and 2" out from the center line. It runs from near the top down to about the lower back brace. The other is 3" out from the center line and runs 3" up from the butt. Both cracks are tight with no visible separation, although I can see a small amount of lacquer on the inside where it wicked through the crack. Before I noticed the cracks I did attempt to repair the finish with amalgamator, but there is still quite a visible crack line in the finish.
I thought I would run my planned fix by some of you with more experience with this type of repair than I.
1) Strip the back completely. Try to get some lacquer thinner to wick into & through the cracks to clean them out. I thought that stripping would be the best, & ultimately the easiest solution, because this is a relatively new finish, it would be easier to, & prob look better, than trying to repair the existing finish, the fact that the cracks run the full length of the back, & the ease of access from the outside on a 4"deep guitar. I would then let the guitar dry for a week or two - to loosen the cracks up a bit.
2) Fill the cracks from the outside with THIN Stew Mac "super glue". I am concerned with the listed 3 to 5 sec cure time for the thin vs. the more workable 10 to 25sec cure time of the medium variety.
3) Glue some EIR re-enforcing cleats to the back between the braces with magnet clamps.
4) Refinish the back.
I originally posted this to the UMGF list back in May, but got very few responses. Frank Ford posted a similar use of Super Glue for a smaller back crack on a '66 D-28. He says he used "thin viscosity cyanoacrylate" (super glue), but this was a much shorter crack than I am dealing with. I was hoping Frank Ford would weigh in with his opinion & suggestions, but he didn't. Maybe I can get him, & others, with more experience to weigh in with their thoughts, suggestions &/or alternatives.
Bob Krueger