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The first veneer I purchased was from local finishing store and think had been sitting around the store for 3-4 years. It was split, dry, brittle. I didn't know any better just thought this was the way it was supposed to be. It got worse as I cut it and tried to fit. It was single ply.
I used the smelly contact cement. It wasn't so bad as I worked just outside my workbench area....aside from the very large spider that got stuck on one piece of veneer. I figured out the key was two coats and actually following the instructions and letting cement dry up before applying. This is not intuitive and wasting veneer and paste (both expensive) doing test runs was not a real option.
I had lots of bubbles in my work. The veneer I removed was seriously bubbled and unacceptable. Main blame was not following directions by letting glue set up.
I also had lots of chip outs with my router.
A photo update after two coats of watco. Start the steel wool routine now. Planning to put crossovers together this weekend. I think Dave doesn't want photos of these spread around so will pass on photos of these so next is figuring out stuffing and should be ready to fire them up in the next 2-3 weeks just in time for my summer hols. Closeup was to show you results of bubbling on one speaker, unfortunately in a very poor location. Should have replaced this veneer as well. Tried cutting and filling th ...
what do you think about my chances of cutting this veneer off and reveneering. What is best way to do this a) to safely remove old veneer old veneer b) to avoid mucking up rest of speaker - sanding, trimming - just seems risky. Speakers are generally great except this one piece. Appreciate the advice.