Support |
fretless guitar is cool although I suspect it will grab some and not others, when I play bass I use a fretless and so many years ago I figured fretless guitar would be cool and made one, oddly enough as much as I think fretless is IT for the majority of bass work, fretless guitar *for me* turned out to be a specialty thing and I rarely use, I've had it for about 15 years but really haven't picked it up in quite awhile, maybe I'll pull it out and give it another chance. filling the frets w/ a paste is not recommended, it will not provide good continuity to the neck which will not be the best for tone or neck life and filling w/ wood strips is easier and looks cooler anyway, if you have an instrument you want to defret; (please don't try this unless your somewhat confident you are capable or don't mind destroying a neck) - email me off list if you want a deeper explanation slack the truss rod pull the frets carefully(if you chip up the fretboard your work will suffer) preheat the frets(solder irnon will do) use a fret pulling tool from stewmac or face ground endnippers, start at one side and slowly work across clean fretslots(if you don't have pro tools an exacto knife and nail file will suffice) get some wood veneer that pretty closely matches the fret gap cut lengths of it to match neck width and with an exacto knife shape the bittom to your fingerboard radius put glue in the slot(wood glue) push the wood pieces in(should be a reasonably tight fit) use 2 strips of wood glued to a backing as clamping cauls to hold the fret ends in place while the glue dries, very little pressure is needed, never put a clamp directly on the back of your neck always use a pad or something, you can work in sections or if you do good prep and work quick you can do it all at once after it dries it will be a bit of a mess, not to fear sand the neck down, good bracing of the neck from below is imortant, it must be evenly supported, you can get a neck sanding tool from stew mac or you can make one by getting a good condition level and glueing sandpaper(contact cement) to it, you'll want to start w/ 80-100 to get the high spts down and quickly go to lighter grits finish the fingerboard w/ a good oil or if your game poly recut the nut lower if you are uptight about this any gtr tech who has converted a bass before can do this easily and it should be about the same cost as a fretjob peace steve