Post
by seeaxe » Mon Nov 28, 2011 8:00 pm
Hi Greg
I have one of these, I bought it when I was 18 yrs old, its now a very old guitar. Mine is cherry sunburst. If you only paid $10 for this, you have a bargain IMHO. It has a ply top but it sounds great (at least to me). I had a fret job done a while back in Auckland, not actually sure whether he replaced them or dressed them, I think the latter, but its now the lowest action, easiest guitar in the world to play. I would part with all other guitars, bought or made, and a lot of other things , before I parted with my one.
Is yours unplayable just because of those frets? Doesnt look like it. Or is there something else wrong? Bent neck?? Broken truss rod??
+1 for dressing them before you try to replace them.
If you do end up taking them out, you will need to dress them anyway to get them perfect, so why not try that first as Trev suggests.
You will have to remove the nut first and take the machine heads off, so you can level them. This guitar has a zero fret, so level that just the same as all the others and you should get a very low action in the first position, if you get it right. I think some people lave the zero fret high, but if the neck is straight you shouldnt need to do that.
+1 for the diamond crowning files too, they are really quick
Then +1 again for Kim's suggestion - it'll be only the first few frets that are worn and it will be a lot more managable job with only a few frets to sort out.
Final point, if you heat the frets to get them out, remember the binding on the fretboard is plastic, so dont go mad, if you melt it you are stuffed.
A good tip I got from the Irving Sloane book was to buy an old pair of pincers from a second hand store and grind the top until you have removed the outside bevel. You will have a very sharp, chisel like bevel on the inside of the pincers, the sharper the better. You can use this to get under the fret edges and lever them gently up. Because the pincers are wide, they dont mark the (rosewood) fretboard. It will cost you less than the Stewmac equivalent and you wont have to pay postage.
There are lots of books in the (Auckland)library that will tell you how to do it and you can buy fret wire from Guitarparts in napier, so you dont have to go to Stewmac.
Having said that, if you do end up going to Stewmac for stuff you are unlikely to be dissappointed and their service is frankly fantastic.
Good luck anyway
Cheers
Richard
Richard