A client wants me to repair a classical guitar that's got termites! I told him not to bring it back to my shop, but he insists to have it repaired, and want to pay me whatever I need to.
I really don't want to have it near my shop, but on the other hand Could it be repairable? Have someone here done a work like this?
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That is some VERY Interesting info Keith!
Thanks for the "insiders" point of view. It's a worthy contribution toward the understanding of the vital "first step" of the craft.
Have a great one,
Paul (:
In my town there's a professional extermination company that has a sealed room you can rent to do a proper fumigation to get rid of infestations. It takes at least 48 hours in a contained cloud of poison (I think they use Vikane) for the stuff to do its job. Once it's done, the bugs are quite gone.
It's not quite as good (in an environmental sense) as the chamber I saw at the Cité de la Musique in Paris, which operates on a vacuum principle. The chamber is big enough for pianos, organs and large furniture, and once sealed inside, they very carefully drop the oxygen inside and kill whatever is living in the wood. They can also fumigate in there.
For one guitar, I'd check for a company that can do it. imagine you could also do it inside a plastic bag, but it takes a long time for the vapors of an effective poison to penetrate all the way through the neck and the endblocks. I would give a do-it-yourself approach like this much chance of success.
I'd also wonder how structurally sound the guitar is. I see violins and the like that have been attacked by European powderpost beetle larvae and they're often pretty compromised. Termites make much larger tunnels than powderpost beetles do.
I found this link on Allied Lutherie's website about filling holes in wood - http://www.alliedlutherie.com/filling_a_hole.htm
Termites were even mentioned in the article. I'm not sure the advice will help in this case, but it still makes for an interesting read.
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