It's a rookie's question, I know, but how do you experienced builders/repairmen reglue a mustache to the top - what kind of adhesive do you use? One fell off my Favino years ago, and I finally want to put it back on. It appears to have been reglued several times. I think I have heard every crazy suggestion from double-stick tape to nail polish(!). I actually like the double-stick tape idea but most of what I can find is pretty thick, and I am not sure that the tiny piece I could use would be reliable. What's the consensus here?
Comments
I think it was Pete Brown at South Jersey Guitar Repair in Collingswood, NJ. He has a website, so you should be able to call him and ask.
There are thin double sided tapes and I use them for a variety of things, but my experience so far is they don't bond well to wood surfaces like the under side of a mustache. Might help if the underside of the mustache were finished to a grain filled, gloss surface. I believe the tape I use is 3M or Scotch product, I get it at Michael's, an arts and craft store that has franchises in the mid Atlantic region, at least.
But why bother. Cyanoacrylate works fine, quick, done. Play it in 5 min. Removal is not too hard as long as you don't use too much, just a quick smack with a small piece of soft wood and a hammer has always popped it off without damage for me. I'm told that application of cold is the way to crack Cyanoacrylate, but I have never had to resort to that.
BBH's suggestion of white glue like Elmer's sounds fine, albeit slow. Adhesion to finished wood is okay, but because there is no absorption of the moisture on the finished guitar top, it takes longer for the glue to set up and bond (24 hours I'd guess as opposed to the usual 30 minutes when gluing unfinished wood. Easy clean up with damp cloth. Removal later can be facilitated with heat. About 200 degrees and a thin spatula will do it if the wood/hammer tap doesn't.
Craig
I used Super glue in the same way that Craig suggested. Not very much and I made sure that the moustache piece was well fitted to the top. They haven't budged and I can say the guitar has not had the gentlest of use.
Ken Bloom
Adrian
I guess I also figure that if violin and mandolin makers don't use the product then it's probably for a reason, and the same should go for guitars.
Just my 2 cents,
Shawn