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Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Tue Jul 09, 2019 7:06 pm
by Ryan Mazzocco
This guitar is a commission build. The back and side set was specifically picked out by the customer and then I purchased it. I believed the dark spots in the sap wood near the top and bottom of the back pieces were just left over from the stacking/stickering process and were only surface deep.
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but after I joined, glued sanded and thicknessed the set, the spot never came out. I'm down to just under .100" which is fine, I could even go a little more, but it doesn't seem to be sanding out. it's on both sides so I'm afraid whatever it is it's all the way through.
Here's a pic as it is now with some naptha on it. It really pops out like a big black spot, or like an unsightly scuff mark. What is a fella to do?
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Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Tue Jul 09, 2019 8:01 pm
by John Clifford
When all else fails, inlay!

Seriously, if it's on both sides, nothing is going to remove it. There are various wood bleaching chemicals, but you'll never get the color to match the surrounding sapwood. So time to get creative and introduce some other woods. Of course, you'll have to get your customer to buy in. But if you can come up with a really eye-popping design, then it's like they're getting a bonus, right?

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Tue Jul 09, 2019 10:00 pm
by Bob Gramann
It’s wood. Wood has variations. Personally, I would use it. But, I guess you have to ask the customer.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 12:22 am
by Mark Wybierala
Do you have a friend that is good with an airbrush? An artist who can maybe creatively duplicate the dark spot? Faux bookmatch?

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 8:36 am
by Bryan Bear
It is interesting that it doesn't show up in the bookmatch. They have about 5 sets up on their website with the same dark spots in the sapwood (probably from the same board) but they mostly show on both halves of the sets. I'm sorry, I don't have any advice, I'm just thinking out loud.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 8:59 am
by Clay Schaeffer
Careful application of wood bleach might lighten it enough to where it won't draw the eye. The other option might be to stain the sapwood to bring it down to match the stain.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 9:27 am
by Barry Daniels
I too was thinking of the stain the sapwood option. It won't hide the dark spot but will tone it down a lot. Q-tips and Transtint would make quick work of this.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 9:44 am
by Ryan Mazzocco
Bryan Bear wrote:It is interesting that it doesn't show up in the bookmatch. They have about 5 sets up on their website with the same dark spots in the sapwood (probably from the same board) but they mostly show on both halves of the sets. I'm sorry, I don't have any advice, I'm just thinking out loud.
Yes, that's just the thing. It sanded out quite quickly on the left side. That's why I kept sanding. I was very sure that it would sand out on the right side as well. And I don't believe it's any naturally occurring coloring in the wood as the mark was very quadrilateral in shape on the the raw set. I'm wondering if I should contact Hibdon about this. They're awesome guys and I don't want to give them any trouble, but I'm just not sure this is going to fly with the customer. And if this is a result of their process then they probably need to be made aware of it.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 10:11 am
by Bryan Bear
Definitely call them but I don't think it is part of the processing. If you look at the remaining sets on their site, you can see three sets with matching sapwood bands and you can see three similar spots entering and leaving the board as it progresses through the slices. I think it is something in the log. I'm guessing your slices are on the tail end of one of these spots and you were able to sand out the shallow side. I can't get a close look but it looks like the "stain" is dark towards the inside of the tree and feathers out into the newer sapwood towards the bark side. Maybe a someone with more tree knowledge will chime in.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2019 12:42 pm
by Clay Schaeffer
You could try oxalic acid on the spot to see if it will remove it. Looking at the staining on the other sets shown I agree with you that I think it is from the processing of the lumber and not a natural occurrence.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2019 3:11 pm
by Bryan Bear
I'm interested in what makes you think it is from the process and not natural? I could be wall wrong with my initial thoughts. To me it looked like the spots were heavier on one side of each bookmatch and looked to be working its way through the board as some would get larger and some smaller as you went through the slices. That and the fact that it goes all the way through made me not think it was some sort of contamination. Mostly because I don't see how it could work its way all the way through the 1/4" of thickness before it was noticed and an attempt to remove it was made. They saw the slices and after running them through the sander mark each one with a number so you know they are looking at them in real time.

Having said all that, and now with two people thinking it is from the process, I am noticing that on the couple of sets that have part of 3 spots on them, they seem to be roughly equidistant indicating that it could be from a roller of some sort. I would assume from the saw since they would not all line up with the edge of each slice being fed through the sander.

If it is some sort of contamination that has soaked through the wood, you might try flooding it with naptha, and let it flash off a few times to see if it gets smaller. That might work if it is some sort of oily contamination from a roller. Or, I could be way off base. :(

Ryan, make sure you tell us what they say.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2019 4:22 pm
by Ryan Mazzocco
First off, I want to make sure that's I'm not coming across as saying anything negative about the guys at Hibdon. They are super guys that produce a quality product at great prices with superior customer service.
I have been in contact with them and they have confirmed that the marks are from the stacking process. Apparently the little wood blocks they used reacted with the sap wood in the walnut and produced these dark marks. They say it's normal for them to see this. What they don't normally see is for it to go deep enough that it doesn't sand out. After selling about 30 sets with the same marks mine had, I have been the first to contact them regarding the problem. So it could be that my set is the oddball, with the stain so deep that it didn't sand out.
I invited my client over to the shop this afternoon and we discussed it. After looking at the piece through a body template and lots of Naphtha we found a good placement for the spot and he's agreed to move forward.
Still, it does make me nervous about buying more walnut with these marks on it in the future....

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Fri Jul 19, 2019 11:30 am
by Waddy Thomson
I have some of that wood. No one has complained. A stain of some kind. Does not come out, but hey, it's wood. Wood has all kinds of anomalies. I built one spec guitar with it, and another on commission where he requested that wood and particularly liked the stain.
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Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Fri Jul 19, 2019 6:16 pm
by David King
Oxalic acid is cheap and handy to have around. I picked up a bottle of the powder at the local True Value and mixed it up hot to remove some rust stains after a titebond glueup gone wrong and it did the trick without bleaching the surrounding wood. Obviously poisonous but no noxious fumes or anything like that to deal with.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Sat Jul 20, 2019 9:30 am
by Brian Evans
Everyone looks at the same thing and sees something different. I look and knowing what caused it I see a badly processed piece of wood with a defect, and I'd reject it. I accept all sorts of things that happen naturally, spalting, grain, colour, but that stain just doesn't appeal to me. I do feel bad about about it, though. :(

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Sat Jul 20, 2019 10:40 am
by Ryan Mazzocco
Brian Evans wrote:Everyone looks at the same thing and sees something different. I look and knowing what caused it I see a badly processed piece of wood with a defect, and I'd reject it. I accept all sorts of things that happen naturally, spalting, grain, colour, but that stain just doesn't appeal to me. I do feel bad about about it, though. :(
That's kind of my point. I'm holding my tongue here because I really like these guys and I definitely don't want to be one of those jerks that goes out and trashes them on the interwebs, but I'm having a hard time not having a problem with this. I agree that wood is wonderful because it does all kinds of crazy things that are often unpredictable and beautiful. Waddy's gutars for example, Not knowing what those black spots are make them mysterious and interesting. But knowing exactly what they are, an artificially created blemish as a result of processing... For me, it's not acceptable. And I feel bad selling to my customer, even though he has accepted it. I will continue to buy the bulk of my material from this company, but I will not be buying black walnut with sapwood if it has these black marks on it.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Sat Jul 20, 2019 11:01 am
by Chuck Tweedy
3rd that.
i'm with Ryan & Brian.
Knots and bark inclusions and spalt-ish mold stains and worm hole - i'm all good with. Those are natural.
those stains are from stickers that were incompatible with walnut - and i would reject that wood.

Re: Dark spot in sap wood

Posted: Sun Jul 21, 2019 8:17 pm
by Clay Schaeffer
The stains show up on their website, so unless they told you they would sand out your chance to reject the wood is pre - purchase. Personally I would reject it for the sap wood, or join it the other way so I could eliminate it. We all get to choose based on our own prejudices. The oxalic acid might help, and even if it doesn't the staining is not terribly objectionable and appears as though it could be a natural feature to most people.