HBP - I know that Gabriel can't imagine working without the power sander, but he's a pro. With one guitar and relatively unlimited time, I'd stay away from any kind of power sander. It's just too easy to burn through and/or remove too much material, especially around the edges. I say this from painful personal experience doing a nitro lacquer finish - 3 times eventually - on a Tele body. Also, are the top and back both dead-flat? If not, even a big sanding block with too coarse a grade of sandpaper can get you in trouble quickly.
Neat project by the way!
Cheers,
Chip
My dad developed bursitis in his shoulder from doing too much hand sanding, so I'm pretty committed to a good random orbit sander. That being said, my experience is that sanding through a finish has more to do with a lack of proper preparation prior to finishing (sorry about the alliteration) and poor technique with the spray gun and the sander than anything else. If you get your pre-finish work right
1, and spray a nice,
wet2, level coat of lacquer, you won't have to sand enough to have a problem. The other trick with a random orbit sander is not to try to use it to perfection. With prep sanding, I would say I get it 90% of the way there with the dyna-braid (our air powered sanders), and between coats I probably get it about 75% of the way there. I get the last part by hand sanding with small sanding blocks (about 1"X2", hardwood for dry sanding, and a dense foam/rubber block for wet sanding). I also usually do all the sanding with 220 by hand, but my prior sanding with 150 is good enough that it only takes me 10-15 minutes for an electric guitar body, as I'm mostly just knocking down the fuzz from raising the grain (wiping down the guitar with a damp cloth) between 150 and 220.
I could go on and on about this stuff, but I won't. I'll only reiterate my suggestion to NOT try spraying nitro at home. If you make a mistake, it can make a really pretty fireball, but I'm guessing you won't appreciate the beauty from the inside!
Gabriel
1Prior to finishing, careful sanding at every grit you use, always with the grain, raising the grain between your 150 and 220 grit passes, sanding to 220 (and no further, as you can inhibit the finishes adhesion to the wood), and making sure that it is as perfect as possible after each grit will get you as far as anything. And I'm serious, you neither need nor want to sand bare wood past 220 if it is going to be finished. I don't care what the internet "experts" say, every finish manufacturer on the planet will tell you I'm right.
2This, aside from inadequate surface prep, is the single biggest mistake amateurs make when spraying lacquer. Any website that tells you to spray dry coats of finish is giving you bad advice. You MUST spray wet coats if you want the finish to be right. I go one step further, and spray two wet coats (admittedly, barely wet, but wet) consecutively. One coat horizontal, and the second vertical immediately following the first. You need good technique with your spray gun, but it makes a world of difference in the finish quality. And somehow, every website I've ever seen talking about finish work tells people to spray dry coats. The chemicals just don't work that way, folks.