vinta9e-
I do scoop out the neck I have. Using a big rat tail round file from fret 12-22, and a rounded rasp file from frets 1-11. So I in fact create a totally flat fretboard between the frets. This in turn makes the frets essentially quite tall so they are actually taller that the highest fret you can buy but on a 9-12 radius neck they don't feel as high as mine.
Goes w/out saying I must sand the wood down as cosmetically, when I am done "scooping, or flattening" the wood, maple or rosewood they look like Rocky the squirrel has been eating the fretboards. And it looks like he is really hungry.
the whole fingerboHowever, I have now just taken on a re fret by myself, took the frets (medium jumbo) out, and will now just flatten ard ( did that a couple days ago ) and bought the highest widest frets StewMac had to sell, and will be using those on my flat fretboard.
I will give the frets a 20" radius, taper the ends by hand with a special edge trimmer from S.Mac
Polish it up, restring, slide a very thin but hard piece of glass with 600 sandpaper under the strings at pressure to find any uneven frets so I am positive I have no string fret outs or buzzing on ANY BENDS.
Used this process on all of my guitars ( the frets radius and flattening ) all 6 or 7 of em.
They all play great, bend without buzz and get the string right in the middle of my finger pad for a great grip and ease of bending. I must wait as my spine is giving me hell for a whole week now and I am sure I'll need some more time before I can finish some must do projects, especially my no load 500K problem where I blamed the pot when someone pointed out certain things that made me doubt my findings. Gotta fix that too.
Thanks all,
SJB