I have a guitar I’m putting together. It all feels solid, however the frets buzz like crazy and I have a decent amount of relief on the neck.
I’m wondering if a fret leveling would be in order. I’m considering doing this job myself, does anyone have any advice on the best ways to go about this? I’ve never done a leveling job or any kind of fretwork, so anything would be appreciated.
Watch a few youtube videos and then give it a shot! Most guitar work is actually pretty straight forward. It doesn't require a lot of experience to get great results if you're patient (if you're not patient then definitely pay someone else to do it). My experience is that an awful lot of people who call themselves guitar techs will do a worse job than you can on your own though.
For fret leveling you will need a few tools:
- fret levelling file (this is just a file glued to a block)
- credit card
- a sharpie
- Masking tape/painters tape.
- a whole lot of very fine sandpaper (this isn't for the levelling, but to smooth out the scratches in the frets so they feel nice and smooth after you're done)
Way to do it:
- Use the credit card to rock back and forth over 3 frets at a time to find high spots
- Mark the high spots with the sharpie
- Do a couple light passes with the fret levelling file over the marked spots until the sharpie starts to show a little (go slow).
- Repeat all steps until you can't find any spots that rock back and forth.
Usually I'll do this for an hour a day for four or five days and the frets will be pretty close to perfect. When you're filing, keep the file over 4-5 frets at a time then there's really no chance of scratching the fretboard.
After this you start polishing the frets with your sand paper. Tape off the fretboard first to avoid accidental scratches. Then I usually just cut a thin strip of sandpaper and lightly press it while going over the each fret one at a time. You're not trying to dig into the fret, just smooth out any file marks. Work your way up through the grits going about 100 more each time 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000. It will be glossy smooth at the end, but again . . . this takes forever. Take it slow, with lots of breaks.
My first attempt at this came out really good with no prior experience.