heres a nice reply I read..
Originally Posted by Hogman49
The first dings always give me a little sick feeling. But I've come to realize it's because it's the only one at the time, and it sticks out like a sore thumb. As time goes by, and there are more dings and natural wear, it actually starts to look great, broken in and played, the way it should. There is no way around it unless you, a) keep it in it's case and never play it, which is lame, or, b) wear pajamas when you play, so you're jeans or belt don't rub up against it, but you will look really lame, and chicks won't dig you. My advice, take a deep breath, strap that guitar on and play the [gooey brown stuff] out of it. You only live once. Rock on man.
The first dent is the Deepest...
Perfect guitars are ding magnets - figure that you've demagnetized it, and enjoy it -
Anybody tried STEAMING dents out using a wet piece of cloth and soldering iron?|
http://guitargarage.blogspot.com/2008/11/how-to-steaming-out-dents-in-guitar.htmlHow To: Steaming out dents in guitar bodies
I wanted to write a post on a technique I've been using for about the last year to remove dings and dents in guitar bodies.
I want to emphasize that this only works for cases where the wood is simply compressed and it will not work for chips, where the wood is actually missing.
The idea is to get water into the dented, compressed wood and then heat it up with a soldering iron until steam is formed, which will then expand and swell out the compressed wood.
The example in this case is a 1966 Fender Jazz Bass body, made of alder. There are two dents I'm going to work on here - one is a sharp dent along the upper edge of the body and the other is a more rounded ding on the side. They are both plainly visible in the picture.
The dented areas are first generously wetted with water - let it soak in for a few minutes at least - and then rewet.
The a cotton cloth is dipped in water, and the wet part is applied over the dent. The tip of a hot soldering iron is pressed against the wet cloth and rolled around a bit. There should be plenty of steam as you do this - otherwise your soldering iron isn't hot enough or you don't have enough water.
This process should be repeated until the dent has popped out - with lots of added water to the wood and cloth each time and allowing the soldering iron to heat up again. I steamed these dents about 4 times over a 10 minute period.
As you can see - the dents are still visible - but the have popped out til they are almost even with the surface. Once this body is sealed, primed and sanded they shouldn't be visible at all.
The second view better illustrates how the dents have been expanded out to near the original contours.
I've used this technique on alder, ash and mahogany bodies - I haven't tried it on a harder wood such as maple - it may not work because it may be hard for the moisture to penetrate the wood to get the required steaming action - but who knows, maybe it will work ?