Re: Bad fretwire?
SOunds like your tech used some of the cheapo asian stuff....
Unfortunately, the only solution is a new refret with a quality wire, sorry.

fftopic:
Uh, if it's a quality co. like Dunlop it comes in marked tubes...
Dunlop, Stewmac, Luthier´s Mercantile and others all sell their fretwire by the pound (i.e. in coiled rolls) as well, and any tech doing a reasonable amount of refrets will have the most common sizes available in this form. On a roll it is nearly indiscernible from cheap crap by anyone without metallurgy experience.
Those boxes of 24 frets are for the hobbyist or for single orders of unusual sizes, and after 15 years I still can´t really think of a situation where the tubes with wire for like 5 axes or so make very much sense.
BTW, the reason some luthiers don't like SS frets is they don't know what they're doing and they're using the wrong tools :laugh2:
I don´t feel insulted even though I probably should. Either way, I´ve done numerous stainless steel refrets in the past, because I´ll do whatever the customer wants for the right price. But since you apparently have experience with this subject, I´m curious as to what tools you would recommend, (compared to a normal refret). Partly becasue nobody ever seems to be able to recommend anything specific, nor are any ever displayed at trade shows over here (that I´ve seen, at least), and I´d love to be able to charge a more reasonable price for SS refrets...
.....
LOL, if Stew-Mac let loose a "bad batch" I'd say that makes their stuff pretty low quality :6:
So, the QC guy (a human) making ONE mistake is enough to damn the manufacturer´s product? From this statement, I think it´s safe to assume that all of your guitar, computer, home entertainment, automotive, recreational, sports, and other equipment is either a: "pretty low qualilty" (because
every manufactuer on earth has let a batch of lemons go at some time or another, and practically all still do today) or b: made by yourself from the base raw materials :laugh2:
*Side Note* Warmoth does NOT do fret dressing at all, which is the main part of any
refret, and causes the most wear on tools. THe rubber cauls for pressing frets in are most likely identical, and that´s all they do (or they´re lying, which I highly doubt).
IIRC John Suhr uses a PLEK these days, and I remember reading something (IIRC on the MIMF) saying that the wear of SS frets on tools was one of the reasons for this decision...
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