This is not only a problem in the guitar restoration scene but the restoration scene in general. I've been recommended a lot of clearly fake restorations lately. It's really a shame.
@RexVergstrong2 жыл бұрын
Oh, and green rust like it was copper is a must in these fakes like you pointed.
@Tomislav_B.2 жыл бұрын
I bought heavily neglected Ibanez RG Prestige from a guy that kept it in garage. Frets were green all over. But still this video is fake although some rust here looks pretty convincing.
@lordfatcock Жыл бұрын
Some restorations are legit, but I prefer blacksmith channels. I think one sword took a guy a couple of years to complete 😮
@RexVergstrong Жыл бұрын
@@lordfatcock Sadly, the legit ones are a minority now.
@larrybremer493011 ай бұрын
People that fake restoration vids are just con artists hoping to monetize views but people that fake animal rescues need a special place reserved in Hell.
@ashperks2608 Жыл бұрын
Dude, I've never even considered these kinds of videos as being fake... but now I'm questioning everything I know. Also, love the channel.
@youuuuuuuuuuutube Жыл бұрын
You were part of the problem. Too many people believe things and that's why there are so many fake videos of everything, and even animals are being tortured in the process.
@santiagomoreno141411 ай бұрын
Most videos found on the internet are fakes. Sadly, they are. The least they could do is not claim to be real. The internet is becoming a big lie.
@stereotypicalemousername950711 ай бұрын
studio asyl has some pretty good restorations (apart from when they ruin vintage stickers) and they’re all real as far as i can tell
@Theonixco2 жыл бұрын
The pockets for the tremolo and electrics are pristine too, there's no wood swelling or flaking given the amount of moisture that would be needed to rust the metal components.
@StarvingMorlock2 жыл бұрын
I bought an Epiphone Les Paul from a pawn shop, all hardware was rusty the wood was cleaned but the pick up pockets were completely full of debris from wood eating worms and their carcasses, and the springs were very rusty as well.
@HiltsyAdventure2 жыл бұрын
no wood damage on the neck either lol, that thing wood be in bad shape if left basically outside for 10 years
@linvesel2 жыл бұрын
@@HiltsyAdventure That's correct. I therefore store my guitars, amps and pedals on the bottom of a swimming pool filled with sea water to avoid contact with oxygen in the air.
@TheVoitel Жыл бұрын
Just imagine how twisted the neck would be ...
@linvesel Жыл бұрын
@@TheVoitel Ever since I lost my last MMA fight, I only play guitars with twisted necks, they are better suited for my left wrist.
@immurerecords Жыл бұрын
I love the coke part. Many years ago I taught autobody at a community college, and I had a student say he saw how coke removed rust from nuts and bolts. We did an experiment taking rusted nuts and bolts and soaking them in coke. We did un covered containers, covered containers and different times soaking from 24 hours to a week. I can say coke does nothing for rust. There was absolutely no change to even the color of the steel. They all looked exactly the same from the day we soaked them.
@AstroRodeo109 ай бұрын
coke isn't for rust, coke can be used to remove corrosion on battery terminals though supposedly.
@CrossfeetGaming4 ай бұрын
@@AstroRodeo10 "supposedly" is carrying that sentence hard.
@Jack_Callahan014 ай бұрын
Either way, I was mad about him and the box flipping. Like bro… he moved it. Now yes it’s still completely fake but he can’t really use him moving a box 180 degrees as evidence
@bskitchenriffs65222 жыл бұрын
I just saw that "barn rescue " BS. Everything is heavily rusted but the neck wasn't warped?
@RickBeall Жыл бұрын
You completely nailed this guy. You ID'd that body thoroughly ... and the frets! LOL. Plus the screws which rust inside the wood. !!
@lennyb80793 ай бұрын
without staining the wood no less.
@Blueeyedramblings2 жыл бұрын
I also loved how the neck plate was completely "rusted" and "weathered" yet the neck next to it completely fine and clean, looking like new
@justaguyonyoutube Жыл бұрын
That's how that would work
@DM-rc4yu10 ай бұрын
@@justaguyonyoutube No it wouldn't. Troll.
@Takato2 жыл бұрын
Love how everything in the guitar is "rusted" as shit, but the neck is not bent even by a milimiter.
@thetokyorake2 ай бұрын
And no fret wear!
@Rex-golf_player81014 күн бұрын
yeah i would expect some warping knowing that the humidity wouldve been completely unchecked if this was real
@rrdee81382 жыл бұрын
Excellent review. You are spot on. I work in home restorations for 35 years. We deal with lots of metals hinges doorknobs and plumbing hardware. We also fake wear all the time. Those brush marks are highly visible great job letting everyone know this is a totally faked wear job thx
@EnterJustice2 жыл бұрын
So doorknobs and plumbing hardware are relic'd as well? Lol
@clamdigr Жыл бұрын
@@EnterJustice Yes, in old historic homes where metal fixtures have a natural patina showing their age, it is sometimes necessary to relic a new replacement fixture when one of the originals fails beyond repair.
@justaguyonyoutube Жыл бұрын
@@clamdigr not nearly the same thing as a guitar lmao
@justaguyonyoutube Жыл бұрын
Also his knowledge of metal is laughably bad, you guys would be shocked to learn how all this actually works.
@clamdigr Жыл бұрын
@@justaguyonyoutube And your point is what? The comment was regarding making house fixtures look old to match historic fixtures, nothing more. Obviously that is very different from faking a guitar. LMFAO.
@brianinski9 ай бұрын
I was a Key Scenic Artist in the Hollywood Film Production industry, and this is exactly how we would rust and age things. Once we rusted a mint condition 1959 Porsche and we had it looking like bubbling leprous rust was about to become a hole in the body and fender metal. There was a misunderstanding and the director wanted a "cherry" 59 Porsche, meaning "mint". The Production Designer called from location in Vermont in a panic, how on earth could this horrific and decrepit automobile be restored without embarrassing delays? I told him to take it to a pressure self wash car wash bay and the warm sudsy wash wand would remove it effortlessly.
@BaBaBaBenny2 жыл бұрын
My brother once found an old acoustic guitar in a barn whilst working at his old job. The frets weren't NEARLY as bad as those, and it'd been kept in a similar environment...
@voornaam3191 Жыл бұрын
But your brother did not pee on it, every week. These "restorers" could have done that. For the right kind of rust. You never know what tricks they do.
@Rex-golf_player810 Жыл бұрын
@@voornaam3191 just piss and shit on it and leave it for 90000 years Then when restoring it they just use some black magic serum to wipe it all off without any effoet at all
@thatotherdan998410 ай бұрын
It's called paint... Who the fucks pissing on stuff to "make it rust"....
@JasonECI2 жыл бұрын
I watched that video... While holding a camera going into an abandoned shed and quickly found his target without checking any places else, my assumption was "an arranged surprise" and went on to other videos. And now I see you suspecting it's a fake one, totally agree!! You are very informational!!! Thanks!!
@Exera802 жыл бұрын
Funny how they hid the serialnumber when turning the headstock around.
@timwhite55622 жыл бұрын
Meh, that's not all that uncommon. You look at used guitars for sale online and they'll guide the serial number, they'll give it to you when you're hashing out a deal. Though they'd usually cover it with tape or paper, not actually remove it. I'd say the gym wrapper hiding the Road Worn is more suspicious.
@viking_nor2 жыл бұрын
@@timwhite5562 he is not selling is he? He claims it is one type of guitar and the serial number would prove it. Of course that is suspicious
@timwhite55622 жыл бұрын
@@viking_norrelax, I didn't kick your dog. the "selling" inconsequential, it's that people don't want the serial number floating around. It's the same think with VIN#s. I said removing it was suspicious.
@ChrisHopkinsBass2 жыл бұрын
And the 5 way switch (very vintage 50s) has a modern part number sticker on it
@nckhed2 жыл бұрын
@@timwhite5562 "Relax, I didn't kick your dog." What a weird reply to a civilized comment. 😂🤦
@michaelmirabal6349 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you posted this. I saw that video last night and was going to say something about how the body didn't match the hardware in "decay" but the comments were turned off. Also, he never showed the SN on the back of the head or you would have seen MX00-000000. It was hard for me to look at the comments on the second half and see some of the accolades he got for posting such a fake vid. I'm glad you called him out.
@ScottPaine2 жыл бұрын
You can see a circle indentation under the foil where the cnc hole is located. Plus the pencil marking in the neck pickup cavity looks clear and clean just like the cavities themselves..
@PeterJRadomski Жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting this. Excellent analysis. I had a guitar from the fifties that needed restoration. It was just shy of 40 years old when I got it, and was in genuine rough shape from having been left in a basement. That being said, it was nowhere close to the condition from the bogus video you shared. Great presentation and breakdown. Subscribed.
@SomethingDiabolical22 жыл бұрын
I got that video recommended and was laughing out loud when I saw those green frets. I still watched to the end to see what he was trying to do to make them usable again, maybe recrowning the frets or even a refret. But getting rid of that 'oxidation' with a simple cloth and some polishing compound was the killer for me. And the abrupt ending was just the cherry on top.
@linvesel2 жыл бұрын
I can’t believe you’re oblivious to the fact that the green on the frets is not rust. Clearly it’s vegetation growing due to high humidity.
@SomethingDiabolical22 жыл бұрын
@@linvesel yeah, my botanical knowledge is pretty poor 😅
@linvesel2 жыл бұрын
@@SomethingDiabolical2 Botanical knowledge is something I always require from any guitar tech before they work on my gear. Given that I store my guitars, amps and pedals on the bottom of a swimming pool filled with sea water.
@imoffendedthatyouareoffended Жыл бұрын
@@linvesel that’s silly, why don’t you bury your guitars when your done using them for the day?
@linvesel Жыл бұрын
@@imoffendedthatyouareoffended I don’t bury them because there is not enough sea water in the soil.
@rajarahman98232 жыл бұрын
Excellent commentary. I too, saw this video and within a couple of minutes, my conclusion was, A FAKE RESTORATION VIDEO. The restoration of furniture videos, also suffer from this ailment. Keep up the good work and as SHAW TAYLOR used to say, KEEP ‘EM PEELED.
@itsalwayssomething74902 жыл бұрын
The irony is that people debunking these types of restorations are giving people better information on how to convincingly fake age a guitar.
@wintlock2 жыл бұрын
i see it more as a "im not mad, just disappointed" kind of thing. like if youre going to fake it at least do it well enough to not be insulting
@CapstoneTider2 жыл бұрын
At some point it may take more skill to fake one than to restore one.
@vinlander84842 жыл бұрын
Youre giving the general population too much credit. The vast majority of people are idiots.
@V3ntilator2 жыл бұрын
Well. They fake everything including fake gaming handheld restorations.
@michaelwoods9005 Жыл бұрын
Relic guitars have been a thing gor decades now. The ship has sailed on that one, bud.
@mahjonglover3614 Жыл бұрын
I do this kind of guitar restoration every time when I want to play my guitar. Then I found out that I still suck at playing it and I put it back on the shelf again for a year
@KDH2 жыл бұрын
"Rust"
@philipm45852 жыл бұрын
Didn't know Wood Bodies could Rust but hey maybe it's so old it turned into Metal
@TheoAndHisPedals2 жыл бұрын
Brushstrokes! A true artist series.
@barstow_2 жыл бұрын
In peace
@larrybremer493011 ай бұрын
What caught my eye was the full length of the rusted screws being pulled out of perfectly clean holes in the wood with no sign of staining from the rusty metal.
@NikkiClouds2 жыл бұрын
"it just disappears! he must have asked it nicely" had me laughing WAY more than it probably should have xD
@EchoRabbit Жыл бұрын
I'm glad seeing so many people calling out fake restorations. It's just a shame that it's not gonna reach more people :I
@Resident-of-Pluto2 жыл бұрын
There's a video I saw a while ago on how to spot fake gun restorations and some of the same ideas apply to guitars as well, especially the metal parts.
@AWMJoeyjoejoe2 жыл бұрын
Backyard ballistics?
@Resident-of-Pluto2 жыл бұрын
@@AWMJoeyjoejoe Yes.
@AWMJoeyjoejoe2 жыл бұрын
@@Resident-of-Pluto His is the only gun restoration channel I trust, and I like how he actually test fires the guns when most channels say "the barrel is too damaged to fire."
@lawrencesinderson2 жыл бұрын
Saw that video too, which was ironically pushed to me by KZbin's algorithm.
@PaddysOrigami2 жыл бұрын
Ik who your talking about the lad in italy
@blucheer87432 жыл бұрын
Spot on! there are a lot of fake “restoration” videos on here it’s actually very easy to “junk up” a piece to make appear restorable… KZbin loves these cause viewers tend to binge watch them.
@MegaTerryNutkins2 жыл бұрын
Real guitar restoration work can be incredible, I watch twoodfrd religiously, Love seeing someone bring tatty old instruments back to life.
@jeremysmetana85832 жыл бұрын
That dude does amazing work.
@linvesel2 жыл бұрын
I disagree about real guitar restoration being incredible. Real restoration is actually quite credible and satisfying to watch and learn. Fake restoration is incredible and extremely entertaining to mock and dump on.
@slightlyaboveaveragebutaverage Жыл бұрын
@@linvesel You brought a lot to the convo, thanks.
@linvesel Жыл бұрын
@@slightlyaboveaveragebutaverage For you, dear friend, anytime.
@Ronilac9 ай бұрын
Be careful with twoodfrd ... he takes a lot of shortcuts
@rlarsen45622 жыл бұрын
I was immediately suspicious when the guitar was "discovered" while video was being recorded.
@TheBoardGarage2 жыл бұрын
I remember seeing Landon’s video, it was great. This is also excellent. What gets me, is that the moment the person grabs the guitar, the side of the neck heel looks perfectly clean.
@xxlocobassistxx Жыл бұрын
Since you were asking about YT recommendations, This was towards the top of the recommendations next to a Trogly video. First time seeing one of your vids, subbed now so hopefully I'll see more of your vids in recommendations!
@gerrykavanagh2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the detailed breakdown. I saw this video, and had plenty misgivings of my own, but this is next level debunk. Top marks lad!
@justaguyonyoutube Жыл бұрын
It's a laughable debunking attempt, entertaining but not even close to accurate especially with his clear lack of knowledge of how metal ages and breaks down.
@gerrykavanagh Жыл бұрын
@@justaguyonyoutube ok
@janemba422 жыл бұрын
5:28 something you missed. On the first fret it's very apparent that the corrosion has been painted on with a brush, you can see the texture of the bristles and how it has been built up in layers.
@SBeckerDTD2 жыл бұрын
I saw this the other day and was blown away by how ridiculous and unbelievable the whole thing was.
@10secondnerd10 ай бұрын
This video came up in my feed, and I am so glad it did. Keep up the honest work
@kevincrozier86252 жыл бұрын
I seen one guy that supposedly found an acoustic guitar that was "caked" in dirt and mud. He actually not only used soap and water to wash it but used a wire brush to get the muck off. That was the most blatant of fake restorations I have ever seen.
@paintnamer64032 жыл бұрын
I remember that.
@terrym1202 жыл бұрын
Any link for that video?
@paintnamer64032 жыл бұрын
@@terrym120 It was the reaction video done by The Guitologist - The cringiest guitar "restoration" EVER video!
@gordonhill8164 Жыл бұрын
There is a digital camera restoration of someone cleaning the highly delicate sensor, mirror and shutter mechanisms with a toothbrush and water. He may as well have used a wire brush because just touching the sensor with your fingers can ruin it. But at the end, you'll never guess, the camera worked perfectly.
@MaxPower-js1sk Жыл бұрын
I restore guitars and I hate fret work. Those frets would have needed chemical treatment, filing, or at least heavy sanding, levelling, recrowning, dressing and polishing. My Dremel probably would have been used quite a bit.
@kennethhoneycutt45132 жыл бұрын
I love the fact you're always busting people on stuff keep it going man much respect
@RockG.o.d Жыл бұрын
i use salt water all the time to get rid of rust, I mean to antique. (please don't use salt water to get rid of rust)
@stormriderkaos2 жыл бұрын
Nice. You can see the foil indentation where the CNC mounting hole is. And the metal is miraculously aged many more years than the rest of the guitar. One way to do this is to place the metal parts and neck in a bag or box with an open container of muriatic (sulphuric) acid.
@raymondmorton51052 жыл бұрын
As a guitar tech who works on many guitars, buys them cheap, fixes them, I can confirm this strat wouldn't be this bad off
@Wrkncacnter7772 жыл бұрын
Re: Tuners/bridge, they're steel, but chrome/nickel plated. You can't plate chrome or nickel directly onto steel, you need to use copper as an interface metal, so it can, and will oxidize green. However, I agree with your assessment, this was not a barn find. That rust looks like the result of roughing up the surface of various parts and spraying them for several weeks with a mixture of hydrogen peroxide and salt diluted with water. The Trem block and frets look like they were painted though, since those as you said, aren't usually iron.
@gerrykavanagh2 жыл бұрын
Yep. I thought forced oxidation myself. That level of pitting and “fur” doesn’t usually occur naturally, unless the barn this was found in is 10m from the seashore.
@blackforestghost12 жыл бұрын
Ever seen a green oxidized chromplated old carbumper? These carparts are chromplated steel, too, but they rust brown/orange not green. Before you do chromplating a steel, you usually do nickelplate it in an electrochemical process. The ammount of copper under it is extremly little, it will not turn a chromplated steel part into green when oxydizing.
@mmckee582 жыл бұрын
Absolutely on the mark. I've been working with some of Rustoleum's textured paints. I think the fraudster sprayed the metal parts mixed in some yellow, and mushed around the paint to simulate rust. I just had to laugh when I saw the turquoise copper oxidation. Thanks KDH...
@superlead10022 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great video! Even though this is a "road worn" guitar, the non relic'd parts of the body still looked too new to have been in that shed for any serious amount of time. The smallest amount of water sitting on the body would have created some kind of damage, especially where the finish was worn away. But I agree that he thought he was clever enough to hide the details that would show that it was a Fender Road Worn body.
@AnthoCMusic Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video ! I was pretty scandalized when I saw this """""restoration""""" video ! Thank you for restoring the truth
@taLLdavidproduction2 жыл бұрын
Also if the screws and hardware were that rusted, they wouldnt have come out that easily.
@myopicautisticmetal90352 жыл бұрын
they would have broken off at the heads and not to mention they didn't stain the screw holes with rust. All of the wood on that guitar was 100% untouched by water/moisture damage.
@schaddalton10 ай бұрын
8:58 the cnc mounting hole is plainly visible under the foil via the divot in said foil.
@ClintsCrypt2 жыл бұрын
Hi KDH. I agree with your evaluation of the restoration video with one exception. I am a welder and I often have to clean rust off of the metal I am going to weld in order to get nice, clean welds. I have used twenty 2-liter bottles of generic Walmart diet cola, which I put in a large trough to remove rust off of 6 foot lengths of mild steel. I use diet so there is no sticky, sugary mess to deal with and it prevents attracting ants and other insects. The key is to leave the metal in the diet cola long enough to deal with the rust without leaving it too long, causing the acids in the diet cola to start affecting the surface of the good metal. It is less expensive to use generic diet cola than to use the same volume of specialty rust removing chemicals. Dill pickle juice works well on old corroded and calcified plumbing parts. I learned that from an old school plumbing parts and repair shop. Regarding the rusty paint brush marks on the metal, it might be possible that the guy painted a light coat of oxidizing chemicals on the metal. They use the oxidizing chemicals to give things a rustic, antique look. Great video! Looking forward to the next one.
@MickH602 жыл бұрын
100%, coke has phosphoric acid in it , that will remove and or convert the rust, the pickle juice has vinegar which will do the same. I also agree on the oxidising chemicals....
@linvesel2 жыл бұрын
How long do you leave the metal immersed in diet cola then? And how would you tell whether the acid in cola has started affecting the good metal underneath the layer of rust? Thanks in advance.
@ClintsCrypt2 жыл бұрын
@@linvesel It depends on how much acid content there is in the soda (which brand) and how much rust there is on the metal. I usually leave the metal I use in the Walmart generic diet soda 24-48 hours, checking on it and moving the metal around regularly. For really heavily rusted metals with rust flakes and pitting, etc. I use stronger cleaners, like Naval Gel. But that is really strong, caustic and harmful for your breathing, etc.
@BenCurrington11 ай бұрын
Friend of mine found a strat copy in his shed when he moved house. Probs there for a few years. It spent maybe 8 more years in my loft before I got round to looking at it. It looked similar to how this one did at the start, but with none of that crazy corrosion. All it took to clean up was a vacuum cleaner, soap and water.
@artiefischel25792 жыл бұрын
My thought during that video was how could the neck possibly be straight if it was exposed to the weather like that. Also, wouldn't you see some frets loosening from the expansion and contraction of the wood over the years?
@linvesel2 жыл бұрын
Neck was straight because it was badly bent prior to entering that climate and the humidity bent it back to neutral. Too bad there is green vegetation growing on the frets.
@AvACyberSecurity Жыл бұрын
As someone who airbrushes models and often on plastic parts that need to look metal, I rust them with powders and paints. It's easy to do but hard to look genuine. This should have been half there because at least its on metal. The frets have definitely been done with that process and yes you're right, I remove the over weathered parts with white spirit and a cotton bud. Comes right off. EDIT: Coke will remove marks on that car. Used to clean rifle parts with it to degrease. Makes you think twice about drinking it. (Which I still do)
@peachmelba10002 жыл бұрын
I think I'll make a video of me going out in my back yard, "finding" my dog caked in dirt and mud (that I certainly _did not_ apply myself), then giving him a bath, and call it a "restoration".
@stevieblunder26562 жыл бұрын
You joke,but oh the views you'd get. Lol
@Tomislav_B.2 жыл бұрын
Just search "animal rescue" here on KZbin. They are all staged rescues, in fact animal abuse videos.
@captainchaos3053 Жыл бұрын
Thing that gets me is the screws don't fight him at all. I have has lots of old guitars and the screws can be more than happy in their home with no intention of leaving with no rust.
@wintyrqueen2 жыл бұрын
Coke actually can help with rust… not like this, though (there was a mythbusters episode where they tested it, too)
@lottieofdoom2 жыл бұрын
For sure - It's an amateur mechanic trick that's decades old. It won't bring it up like the car in the video, but it *does* work.
@wintyrqueen2 жыл бұрын
@@lottieofdoom I used it on my old Chrome Floyd Rose. It’s not perfect, but I’m not going to have to replace it as soon
@ClintsCrypt2 жыл бұрын
I am a welder and I often have to clean rust off of the metal I am going to weld in order to get nice, clean welds. I have used twenty 2-liter bottles of generic Walmart diet cola, which I put in a large trough to remove rust off of 6 foot lengths of mild steel. I use diet so there is no sticky, sugary mess to deal with and it prevents attracting ants and other insects. The key is to leave the metal in the diet cola long enough to deal with the rust without leaving it too long, causing the acids in the diet cola to start affecting the surface of the good metal. It is less expensive to use generic diet cola than to use the same volume of specialty rust removing chemicals. Dill pickle juice works well on old corroded and calcified plumbing parts. I learned that from an old school plumbing parts and repair shop. Regarding the rusty paint brush marks on the metal, it might be possible that the guy painted a light coat of oxidizing chemicals on the metal. They use the oxidizing chemicals to give things a rustic, antique look.
@aaroncurry279 Жыл бұрын
Saw that video and couldn’t get past the foil part. Thanks for letting us know what it was hiding. He also put less tremolo springs back in if my memory serves me well. BTW…A bit of white distilled vinegar works great on rusted parts especially if you can immerse them for a bit. Great video, man. 10 Q!
@DaveGrandel Жыл бұрын
I second the efficacy of white vinegar. I fished a rusted set of cable crimping pliers out of the lake and they were so rusty that they wouldn’t even open. Overnight in a red solo full of vinegar and the rust was gone and the pliers were restored to their original function. The metal was dark, not shiny, per se, but they work just fine now!
@jstro-hobbytech2 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of the acoustic restoration video Brad the guitologist highlighted about 3 years ago haha
@1040ecapja2 жыл бұрын
That one was hilarious. When the guy just went nuclear and pulled out the power sander.
@Tomislav_B.2 жыл бұрын
That was a proper restoration done by professional.
@TheCarlocolombo2 жыл бұрын
the first time I saw the video of the guitar restoration I thought it was a fake, but I didn't go that deep into it. Your review is perfect
@steveanthrop8475 Жыл бұрын
I watched this video, and was very confused at times myself. You have done a great job of explaining why these things were confusing to me. I was amazed that he polished the bare wood the same as the finished unworn surfaces. Also, how could a guitar with so much moisture damage, have no warping?
@Bobba_raekus9 ай бұрын
Imagine putting so much time into faking a restoration that it amounts to double the work an actual restoration would have taken.
@BAProductions15C Жыл бұрын
I know I'm late to the party, but everything you have noticed here is bang on. Using the comparison with the diecast car, I can totally agree 100% fake. Whilst I am a guitar player and own several beauties, I don't own a road worn series but your evidence is spot on when you do the research. I can definitely say the original uploader is doing 100% fake restorations, just based on that diecast car. I also collect vintage and collectible diecast cars and have done a couple of restorations to save them. The fact the body of the car was completely devoid of paint and then rusty? That isn't natural wear. With many toy vehicles (let's be fair vintage diecast cars were made as toys way back when) that are playworn, it won't be completely devoid of paint on the top side, unless someone has deliberately removed that paint, either as a kid out of idle curiosity, or as an adult. The fact is, to get a diecast car body that devoid of paint, you need to dunk it in paint stripper. To get it looking that bad, you either have left it outside for 20 years, or artificially weathered it as bare metal. One thing you missed whilst doing the comparison was that if you look closely when he removes the car from the "Coca Cola" you can just see on the inside of the body that there is paint. This points to two things. One is it's fake (obviously) and Two, anyone restoring a diecast toy car properly would also remove the paint from the inside of the body. Why? Simple science, if you have any old paint on that body, the new paint will likely react to the previous surface.
@lancemalvey597 Жыл бұрын
Not even 44 seconds in... and I'm reminded of my grandfathers guitar (cheap strat copy he gave me before he passed from cancer) I looked up one thing special on it to see if it could be made playable again, Instantly after that search I was bombarded by the company who made it asking if I would like to purchase another (Can't replace the fact it was my grandfather's which I told them) only to be met by them telling me it's not worth it and to by another. This went on for 6 months until I lost my cool and told them where to shove it. Loving the fact that you call out businesses like this (which you already have made a video about said brand) keep up the good content.
@BenState11 ай бұрын
Despite the clear deception, it's a fantastic skill for working in visual arts, movies etc. All he had to do was add a "*for entertainment purposes only." at the beginning and it would be a sweet video. PS, the Coke is not as implausible as some of the other fakery as it contains phosphoric acid; a key component in a lot of rust and stain converter producs like 'Ranex'.
@liamflynn2653 Жыл бұрын
Around 5:45, you make a noise that beautifully and perfectly expresses the sentiment of every sane person
@maxpsidt139010 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Coke is actually a very good cleaning solvent. Never tried cleaning rust with it before, but i can say that i was told by a investigator that coke can wash blood off stuff to the point where its not traceable
@flatroc18 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for you take on this restoration. I watched simply as a type of relaxation or meditation and didn't even really assess what I was seeing but you are so right and I think we should all fight against "fake" content. It's sleazy.
@mx5534 Жыл бұрын
MORE VIDEOS LIKE THESE SHOULD BE MADE AND GETTING ALL THE VIEWS! FOR CALLING OUT PEOPLES LIES AND BULLSHIT! THANK YOU FOR THIS!!!
@thezombiequeen190810 ай бұрын
A few years ago the girl I was dating gave me a strat a family friend had left in her parents shed. I stayed up all night trying to get it in working condition. It wasn’t in that bad of shape. It just needed cleaned and a few parts replaced. It took forever to get the trashy stickers he had off it. Then after all that work that family friend randomly came out of nowhere looking for the guitar he forgot about for 5 years. It is surely sitting in someone else’s shed.
@San_Vito10 ай бұрын
Sadly, that's the risk of working on the guitar of someone you don't/barely know. At least you should be proud of your work.
@rollomaughfling380 Жыл бұрын
Nice takedown, KDH. As a fan of real restoration videos, and of real luthier restoration videos (Dan Erlewine, etc.-my cousin once removed is Randy Wood) these kinds of channels disgust me. And thanks for mentioning Rory. What a legend.
@ArtOfficialRecords Жыл бұрын
slapstick restoration is my favorite genre of video KDH thank you for sheading some light on the wonderful community!
@benplayssongs88492 жыл бұрын
The high frets often have strumming pick wear on old guitars. So the wear up there could actually make sense. I have a real 55 tele neck and it had wear approximating the "road worn" strat in the video.
@benplayssongs88492 жыл бұрын
But the restorwtion video is definitely 100% fake. I just want to point out that wear that high makes sense.
@kft590 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely spot on in your analysis. I had commented in the video you are evaluating why would anyone abandon a Stratocaster of any age because it is worth at a minimum of$500 and probably worth more. I also asked how old the guitar was because that would be an important fact to know, so they would run the serial numbers to verify. When they didn''t verify the age that seemed pretty sketchy.
@JazzRockswithAdam Жыл бұрын
I agree with everything. But, frets can turn a little green with tarnish. (Emphasis on little. Not caked-on like in the video)
@Expedient_Mensch11 ай бұрын
I agree with your assessment of the corrosion, I have "restored" guitars that have been abandoned in a damp garage for years and years, but never do they look like this.
@landofahhs_12 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with your assessment of the supposed age of that guitar and the phony aging or ridiculous amount of corrosion. To me, it seems impossible for the body and tuners to have gone through the conditions required to make that nasty corrosion without completely destroying the neck's fragile finish. The neck without a finish would expose the maple to all the elements necessary to cause warping and rot, but it has been miraculously spared...excluding the green frets! Back in the old days we used to have a saying in data processing that applies here: "Garbage in, garbage out." :)
@petrucci973 Жыл бұрын
Man I genuinely appreciate people who call out BS. Thank you. Keep the good work.
@moochnhowzn Жыл бұрын
I fully agree with you. I’ve been restoring guitars for years now and have never seen anything this ridiculous and especially the magic frett restoration. Wish it was really that simple and quick as it would have saved me hours of hard polishing after redoing the fretts.
@localbod2 жыл бұрын
As someone who has repaired and cleaned up my own guitars, you are spot on. That video was FAF.
@Destin65 Жыл бұрын
This is a great analysis of that fraud video. I have some info for you on my take to back up some of your stuff as well as I am pretty confident I know what that white powder was. First, i recently refreshed my girlfriend's electric that's 16 years old. First, her guitar is in way better shape, but, get this, her tuners did have some light greenish stuff on her tuners, primarily the backside and almost translucent. Turns out it was the bluish grease/lube leaking out, just looked greenish because of the satin finish of her tuners. Wiped right off with what I'm about to tell you next. While researching the best product to, preferably home-based, clean up her metal hardware of dust and very mild corrosion I found the recipe of salt, vinegar and water. Almost like a foot soak, but for guitar hardware. I thought , while it was soaking, dentures are cleaned using baking soda because it creates an agitation effect when mixed with vinegar. Presto, bubbled up just like in the video that you questioned. And believe me, a little salt and 50/50 mix of vinegar and water and throwing some baking soda in there to agitate it, it cleans the shit out of hardware. Her Floyd Rose bridge came out looking almost factory new with just a quick rinse of water after taking it off. And this recipe will neutralize rust, BUT, it will not remove badly rusted areas as I found out as 2 very small spots of embedded rust on the washers for her tuners didn't come off but were neutralized and changed color. Moving on... I have a 1989 super strat (a Westone model, not Fender) and was struck by the fact the 1989 Westone Dimension used the same exact tuners and knobs as her 2007 Luna Andromeda guitar... but the 1989 guitar moved a lot with me, saw a lot of bad conditions, abuse, storage sheds, and humidity. That 34 year old guitar looks brand new compared to that guitar in the fraud video that you correctly point out is likely just 13 years old. Yeah, my 1989 has rust, but as you said, only on surface areas, anything below wood level looks new, such as the screw threads. Can't believe someone deliberately took a factory relic guitar and tried to pass it off as a historic "barn find" classic!! LOL Keep up the great investigative work!
@theonescratchwonder6484 Жыл бұрын
I actually really do like that scene from toy story and have mentioned this to several people and purchased one of those sewing kit boxes that have extra shelves when you open it. I like restoration videos as well, you nailed it mate!
@phatlyt Жыл бұрын
I just love how the springs from the tremolo have no slack.. I recently changed out the springs on my mockingbirds floyd rose, now guitar is nearly 30 years old and that weas the third (as far as I know) set of springs that'd been replaced, I've had the guitar for 12 years now, and the springs really lost some of their torsion in that time being played day in day out whether gigging or just faffing round at home. that one is a big give away for me with "restoration" video's like this one covered here.
@milamber319 Жыл бұрын
Not to mention that anything that would rust that trem would rust clean through the strings. at least most of them.
@tonybushell79713 ай бұрын
Thanks for calling this out. I thought it was a roadworn from the beginning. The shielding over the roadworn stamp on the body. Remarkably tidy frets for a heavily played guitar
@CeeKayz0rz Жыл бұрын
Nickel silver will develop green oxidation as the copper within starts oxidizing - same reason sterling silver starts turning black... However, nickel silver has roughly 60% copper, where sterling silver has only up to 7.5% copper (typically with other metals as well)... Most of the rusting and oxidation does indeed look legit (the green on the back of the tuners is a bit suspect), but what truly busts it are what you pointed out: 1. a 13 year-old guitar CANNOT possibly be that rusted, at least without massive damage to the finish and wood as well, i.e. flooded 12 years ago and left in a junk pile... 2. the plug port being so heavily rusted on the outside and then perfectly fine inside. 3. brush strokes in the "rust" on the trem parts (iirc, they were trem parts). 4. horrifically rusted neck plate, with perfect wood finish underneath. Would be fun to see the magical transformation of the metals back to perfect chrome in the next video. I'm betting not a spot of pitting or lifting chrome plating on any of those heavily rusted parts... ;)
@michaelbergman1073 Жыл бұрын
I am right now restoring a 1938 Gibson acoustic. Some of the metal on it is just as rusty as this and the lacquer is still in good shape. It's hard to determine what moisture will do. But unless you have done this type of work you don't know. But I'm figuring that the neck plate could not rust underneath without damaging or sticking to the wood. But yes brass turns green as well
@JeTTRod11 ай бұрын
I actually did restore my old rusty fender(it sat in a flooded sea-can for 2 yrs). The jackplate is now mounted inside out cuz the outside was so rusted (the inside was also rusty, just a little less). The neck was warped (it took a couple months of leaving it in a home made jig to straighten it, hanging in my bathroom during hot showers, tho no idea if it actually helped), the paint and body was cracking etc... It now has new paint, screws, inside out jackplate that still shows past rust scars, and fret bars with barely enuff metal left to still be useable... ..it might not be perfect or worth anything, but its still great for bouncin' off the walls with on a Saturday night with the other noisemakers....
@tonto98692 жыл бұрын
Hey, great vid on this "restoration". So much good information. Just a little pick up on your explanation. You have mentioned a few times the "green rust" (in particular the tuners) on the steel parts. I could be wrong but aren't the steel parts (not the frets) chrome plated? A process of chrome plating includes a plating of copper before the chrome goes on. Once the chrome is heavily scratched, worn or cracked moisture gets in and copper oxide is made, hence the green rust. 😉
@jackx4311 Жыл бұрын
@KDH - noce work, mate! Yes, you can remove rust by chemical means, *BUT* you will ALWAYS be left with pitting where the rust was - and there are plenty of real restorations showing this, and how the only way to get back to a smooth surface is to use filler to back-fill the pits, then sand level and paint. Oh, and as the man says (and confirmed by my own experience), when wood screws go rusty, the head rusts, but any parts of the screw firmly in the wood do not.
@SimonWitt Жыл бұрын
Good job on calling out the fake. My annoyance with the restoration/repurposing videos that land in my feed is that they almost always seem to be someone who knows the basics of blacksmithing and turning everything they find into a knife. It's always a knife. Don't be surprised if the guy who did the fake restoration on the Strat then melts the metal on the guitar down and makes a fancy knife out of it in part 2
@Bravo-Too-Much Жыл бұрын
For the record, I have an acoustic from 2005 that sat in a non airtight soft case in a north Texas garage since roughly 2010. Weather changes often here with heat and humidity being involved for most of the year. My tuners have a weird rough texture now, although no rust. It feels similar to dust that hardens over time and becomes sticky because of humidity. Wiping off with alcohol and cleaning agents does not remove the rough kind of texture. I haven’t polished or used polishing agents though. My point being, the texture you mentioned looks just like mine just not rust colored. None of the wood swelled, the fretboard and neck as a whole is fine, and the guitar plays fine. I would have thought the wood would have swelled since the interior is soft and not veneered or protected in anyway.
@timpotter333710 ай бұрын
I had the misfortune of watching that "restoration", wink, wink, video. Stopped it when the pick guard camrestored. That's when I was convinced the video was a fake, too clean, foil stuck to the body. The frets gotta be some kind of joke. I'm glad this video is posted because you point out the fakery for people to see. I'm betting there isn't gonna be a part 2 on that resto.
@hefoxed Жыл бұрын
So I started watching your channel because of following the the established titles too closely, but now youtube is reccing you to me and I've watched like 5 of your videos, they're very interesting even to someone like me that knows nothing about guitars (well, now I know a little more), you explain things clearly and your voice is quite southing to listen to
@thebayandurpoghosyanshow Жыл бұрын
1. I've had to deal with 30+ years old Soviet guitars, the build quality on those was crap and most didn't even have truss rods, so the necks had completely warped. In no case have I seen the nickel or chrome coating of the guitar hardware just uniformly peel off and allow the steel to rust. 2. There's also "gold fret wire" that substitutes nickel in the alloy for copper. A relatively modern thing, I fail to see the appeal. 3. The finish wear was definitely not organic, unless the player wore a sandpaper shirt. 4. Wherever I find rust, I'm forced to remove material. Physically or chemically, doesn't matter. The surface under the rust is pockmarked because the oxygen penetration is not uniform in steel. Sometimes you can restore it, sometimes you use filler, sometimes you just throw it away and get new parts, especially if the structural integrity and the functionality of the part are compromised. 5. Let's say wood reacts to environmental factors in a much more dramatic way than metal does. If the screws had rusted inside the wood, the wood would have expanded around the holes and everywhere unprotected by finish. 7. It was vinegar and baking soda. Vinegar is actually used to remove rust because iron oxide is much more reactive to acids than iron and steel are. The baking soda, surprisingly, is used too - as an abrasive material. Mixing the two together is for dramatic effect, but it nullifies the effectiveness of both.
@DeeTee793 ай бұрын
This video had me rolling on the floor. I completely agree with the author. The Rory Gallagher comparison had me in tears, acidic sweat, so true.🤣🤣
@Lord.S Жыл бұрын
Why does the neckplate look like spam...
@keefer88 Жыл бұрын
thank you for actually learning the difference between rust and corrosion
@zebraloverbridget Жыл бұрын
It is possible to remove real rust with minimal effort! Assuming that the rust isn't too far into the metal yet, but it can work on rust that is more than just at surface level. I've done it countless times and all you need is some strong vinegar. I believe I use 30% vinegar meant for cleaning, and then you can just fill a tub, put the metal in, and stick it outside to soak. (outside because it smells bad) You can also make a paper towel damp with the vinegar, wrap it tightly around the metal and let it set. I usually wait until the paper towel is dry but you probably can take it off sooner. This method can require doing it multiple times though since the paper towel can only soak in so much of the rust after it is removed by the vinegar. It is the most satisfying since you can see clear outlines of where the rust was on the towel though
@terrymatlock58725 ай бұрын
I watched the video you are refrencing in my KZbin feed and it was immediatly followed up with your video. I appreciate you pointing this out. I like restoration videos but i don't understand why people would fake them. Thank you.
@davidsmart3514 Жыл бұрын
I love how the rusted components left no staining anywhere they came in contact with the wood or plastics.
@philfichtinger30099 ай бұрын
i love how you put this together and described it all. very well done, sir.
@MsRavens1311 ай бұрын
I've been a guitar luthier and player for over 50 years. And you are 100% on the money. 👍🤠
@Sera69FI Жыл бұрын
Good video! I have restored and painted cars about 30 years, and I find very amusing fake videos about restoring cars.
@buckellard10 ай бұрын
This was in the side panel of recommended videos. :) "Rustier than a sunken ship wreck". Priceless!!