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Topic: The Care and Feeding of MOTS |
Larry Carlson
From: My Computer
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Posted 20 Sep 2017 12:23 pm
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OK......here's how I got myself into this pickle.
A woman who had lost her husband a few years back heard I play lap steel and she had his laying out in the garage.
It is, according to the serial number, a 1947 Supro w/brown MOTS.
It is quite possibly the ugliest guitar I have ever seen.
It is in rather poor shape with rust, noisy pots etc. but everything works, more or less.
She wanted to give it to me but after explaining why I wouldn't do that she accepted $100 for it and I felt a bit better.
My question is: some of the MOTS has delaminated itself from the guitar body and has formed bubbles and wrinkles.
Is there a way to retighten the MOTS using heat or any other technique?
I don't even really know what MOTS is except for being ugly, especially in this awful brown color.
I can fix the pots, tuners etc. so I can play this little thing but if I can improve on the MOTS it would look a bit better.
This is not a restoration. I enjoy getting an old forgotten guitar up and running again. I have 9 of these old things.
None worth looking at twice but I enjoy fixing them almost as much as playing.
I've never worked with MOTS before so I'd thought I would ask. Other than the bubbles the covering is in excellent shape.
I am also willing to just leave the MOTS alone and repair everything else and start playing it if what I want to do is not possible.
Thanks for your time. Any help would be appreciated. _________________ I have stuff.
I try to make music with it.
Sometimes it works.
Sometimes it doesn't.
But I keep on trying. |
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Allen Hutchison
From: Kilcoy, Qld, Australia
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Posted 20 Sep 2017 3:21 pm
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G'day Larry, I believe it's this stuff, & I wouldn't go anywhere near it with an open flame - hot air heat source maybe? (hair dryer)
If you can get under the loose bits with new contact glue & apply weight or clamps to hold it down, that's about all you can do IMHO, short of a full resto
Others may have more ideas?
Cheers from Oz, Allen.
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Larry Carlson
From: My Computer
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Posted 20 Sep 2017 4:48 pm
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Hi Allen,
Thanks for the reply.
I have been told they soak a sheet of the material in acetone until it softens
and then they drape it over the guitar body and mold it into shape.
I've looked about everywhere and I can find nothing on repairing or shrinking
it to fit using heat such as a hair dryer or heat gun or even reattaching edges that have come loose.
MOTS is just weird stuff. It's as thin as paper, brittle, no one seems to
know how to work with it and to top that off it's ugly.
It's now become a challenge; me against the MOTS.
I'm not sure I am going to win. _________________ I have stuff.
I try to make music with it.
Sometimes it works.
Sometimes it doesn't.
But I keep on trying. |
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Allen Hutchison
From: Kilcoy, Qld, Australia
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Posted 21 Sep 2017 1:39 pm
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No worries Larry - just thought I'd add my 2 cents.
BTW - had another thought - have you tried asking around at your local kitchen/bathroom furniture cabinet makers? They may be able to offer some advice!
All the best & good luck with it.
Allen |
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George Piburn
From: The Land of Enchantment New Mexico
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Posted 21 Sep 2017 5:15 pm From a Guitar forum entry
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Someone wrote , not Mr.Boards
Repairing Mother of Toilet Seat.
Like many other plastics of the era it can be softened with acetone and patches or repairs can be melted in with acetone.
In fact I believe acetone was what was used to form the peraloid sheets and then to melt them onto the wood base in the first place.
Cracks, provided the edges are still even, can be repaired with acetone.
Just go easy with it. You can turn the plastic to mush if you over do it.
Another Fellow Wrote :
Mother of Toilet Seat, or Pearloid, is a celluloid (traditionally) plastic made by mixing chunks of celluloid in solvent, stirring to get the pearlescent texture, curing and slicing. Thin sheets were solvent-bonded to lap steels.
There is enough nasty toxic chemicals involved in form-applying MOTS to a lap steel to make a Californian blush.
Not for the hobbyist or faint of heart I would guess.
Any touch-ups would likely stick out like a sore thumb. If it were me (hey, I'm a tinkerer too, and that's out of my league),
I'd merely clean up the vintage lap steels, put on new strings and play them. _________________ GeorgeBoards S8 Non Pedal Steel Guitar Instruments
Maker of One of a Kind Works of Art that play music too.
Instructional DVDs
YouTube Channel |
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Larry Carlson
From: My Computer
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Posted 21 Sep 2017 6:09 pm
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Hi George,
Thanks for the response.
I've read how they used to make MOTS.
Good grief, sounded like one stinky dangerous process.
You could either gas yourself or blow yourself up.....your choice I guess.
I think I may take your advice and just play the darn thing.
I've got the pickup balanced between the strings now. At first two barely made a sound.
Tuners are repaired and the fretboard, nut etc. are all back in reasonable shape.
I didn't modify anything, just repaired it and cleaned it up a bit.
It sounds nice.
Hey, it's a $100 guitar and it plays again.
I'm happy.
I just got caught up in trying to find info about MOTS. Not a lot out there.
Have a good day. _________________ I have stuff.
I try to make music with it.
Sometimes it works.
Sometimes it doesn't.
But I keep on trying. |
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Tom Wolverton
From: Carpinteria, CA
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Posted 22 Sep 2017 7:33 am
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Sounds a bit like ivoroid binding material. For modest repairs, you might try Duco plastic cement. I've used it on binding repairs. _________________ To write with a broken pencil is pointless. |
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Don Barnhardt
From: North Carolina, USA
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Posted 22 Sep 2017 3:22 pm
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Leaving it alone is the best advice. If you just can't live with it, trim out the offending spot and touchup the wood to match. |
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G Strout
From: Carabelle, Florida
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Posted 23 Sep 2017 3:12 pm
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Cellulose Nitrate aka Pearloid aka MOTS is available at reasonable pricing from the company below (see link)
Shipping may be a bit high as they are located in the UK
http://www.rothkoandfrost.com |
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