It is a lot of work.
However, I have accumulated several Strat style necks over my lifetime, all which I know can fit my 2 main, soon to be 3 main Strats, and the third will need a neck. (I got the body as part of a trade)and I have the motivation and for the type of neck I want, I believe I have the skills needed after all my neck mods to give it a go.
A re-fret done by somebody I trust around here would be $$200.00 bucks labor or so. Same thing from Warmoth, a whole new very basic neck would be at least that if not more. An eBay purchase would be 80 bucks or so, but I have 15 dollars worth of fret wire, enough for the job, so I figure, why waste the money and extra effort to fix a new neck to my specs when I have it in front of me.
So wish me luck. All I need now is a fret cutter!
SJ
Sure, but all that for a flat fretboard... well, if it's worth it for you.
That's not much work. Plus its fun to do things like that for yourself.
You guys are killing the economy though! Think of all the luthiers going hungry because of you guys!...jk![]()
If you have the time and tools to do that then good on ya! I would love to but being in a studio apartment means now is not the time in my life to take on such things.
That's no excuse, i know this guy who tried to paint a guitar in his bathroom. He lined the walls out with plastic sheets and did it in there. I cant recall who it was.
That's no excuse, i know this guy who tried to paint a guitar in his bathroom. He lined the walls out with plastic sheets and did it in there. I cant recall who it was.
"If you can chop up a body and dissolve the body in sulfuric acid in your home,
You sure as hell can paint, or, even make a guitar in it."
My pastor always said
Archer250-
Nothing is too much when it comes to guitars, as long as I can afford it! It is one good thing about being very single.
BTW, your cat looks too comfortable. Humans may be on the top of the food chain, but house cats are on top of the comfort chain!
SJ
Kramersteen-
I could not be more with you. Every guitar I have I flatten out, by hand, the wood between the frets, this gives me a flat fretboard effectively. I then radius the frets to 20" - string it up, tune it with a raised nut (very high about half an inch off the fretboard) this way while the neck is bent in it's full string tension, I flatten out the center with a FLAT fine sander, loosen the strings, smooth the frets with a StewMac tool, and hand taper the fret edges. I can bend anywhere and have NO string buzz, plus there is plenty of room for my fingers to get under the string and really grab it to bend without hardly any wood dragging on my fingers.
I love it. I almost PM'd you about this but now I don't have too. I am currently making my first re-fret from scratch. Just removed the old frets from a Squire neck and am in the process of flattening the fingerboard. I bought the highest, widest frets I could from StewMac, but the only problem is I had no idea how hard just the nickel/silver frets were! I have some strong industrial strength wire cutters but they are clearly not enough. Almost broke my hand.
Have to get a professional fret cutter from LMMI or StewMac before I can go any further. Cheapest ones I can find are 30 bucks, so that will be worth it.
Any advice is welcome if you can think of anything. Thank you,
Steve Buffington
You are not alone, Steve. What's probably the one best playing guitar I've touched in my life has a 20" fretboard.To me a 20" radius is as flat as I care to go. I am very alone in this respect.
What you need is tall frets. Not necessarily superdupermegajumbo, but at least, like, 1.4mm tall. Low frets aren't as bendy-friendy. Kudos for mentioning Chris Poland.I really don't like the drag on my fingers from the neck wood
greekdude-
Never been to jemsite, but I will go there on my laptop tomorrow, my iPad in bed at this hour does not go to very many places, all the links in this forum are blank or go nowhere. Thanks for that info, I could use a break, spent far too much money this whole last year. Most of it medical. That is just plain way out of balance!
Jacson Distortion,
I don't know what FTW means, but I get your main point. How odd we could be so very far apart in what we like. To me a 20" radius is as flat as I care to go. I am very alone in this respect. I really don't like the drag on my fingers from the neck wood, and as I have said, I love to get the string right in the middle of my finger pad, really get a no slip grip so I can bend from a high C on the B string to a high E or even F# for fun without it slipping. There is a guy, I think his name is Chris Poland? This guy bends up like that, like a sitar bend, and goes from any note within that range with such ease, I think I saw him on a Premier Guitar Digital newsletter under "lessons".
Archer250- you ever notice how different it is when a cat stares at you than a dog. A cat stare is spooky, like they know what you are thinking, like they are telling you to hurry the F up!
Cheers folks,
SJ