All,
First let me say that I'm complete newbie to this forum, and have no experience as a luthier. I do have some basic experience in carpentry and spray finishing, but nothing to the extent of members on this forum.
That said, I bought a cheap bass made in Korea a couple of years ago, and while I was pretty happy with the milling, the finish work was less than perfect. The nut was roughly cut and the neck did not have a pleasing feel to the satin finish. The gloss finish on the body was very good, though. I sanded down the offending edges of the nut with wet 400 grit wrapped over a piece of 1" PVC coupler, which allowed me to precisely remove material from the nut without touching the surrounding neck. After the rough material removal was done, I masked the neck and switched to 3M flexible polishing paper (600, then 1200), and that turned out very nicely. As the final step, I used a set of Micro-Mesh to lightly sand down the imperfections in the neck finish and bring it to a light gloss.
For my bass, this was perfect. The Micro-Mesh does a great job. So, I tried sanding out some light scratches out of the gloss finish on my acoustic. It worked well, but the resulting finish was still lightly scratched, even after the final grade of Micro-Mesh. I then used some Maguire's plastic cleaner (mild abrasive I already had for polishing my motorcycle helmet face shield) and that gave back most of the shine, especially on the pick guard. However, it's probably not the right nor the best tool for the job.
If I wanted to get the finish to absolutely glass-like shine with no visible scratches at all, can someone be kind enough to either point me to an existing article or outline the steps to achieve that final super-lustrous finish?
Many thanks in advance,
Steve