T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2216.1 | File away... | WMOIS::MELENDEZ_M | | Tue May 28 1991 11:23 | 5 |
| The way my old fretless bass got to be fretless was by
filing the frets away. When I got the bass, it was alredy
fretless. The fret part that goes into the wood are now the
fret marks.
|
2216.2 | read up before you do anything... | GIAMEM::DERRICO | Stand and deliver! | Tue May 28 1991 12:49 | 22 |
| What you'll find Tom, is that if you pull the frets out; you will have
small indentations in the neck - where the frets were. You can get
buzzing and dead notes if you don't have the slots filled.
Some frets are inserted from the top, and a different kind are
inserted from the ends. I'm not shure which. - Both may or may not
be glued in.
If you do pull the frets out you might need a pair of cutting
pliers that have the surface on top instead of on the side.
You might also try to pull the frets out from the side - I'm not
shure.
If the frets are pulled out, you will probably have to file or
sand your fretboard. If you file your frets down, you will only have
to file the sharp edges, and maybe add some kind of glue to keep the
remaining fretwires from coming up. It may need to be sanded.
The biggest thing is to be careful. I pulled the frets out of a
cheap bass and was not at loss (much) because of the butcher job that
I did. It was a cheap bass.
You might try to find some books on luthier type work at the library
to get an idea as to what to really do.
/John
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2216.3 | Might turn out nice - take your time | CSC32::MOLLER | Fix it before it breaks | Tue May 28 1991 16:06 | 11 |
| Take your time pulling out the frets. When I've filled in the
fret slots, I've used white epoxy (the 2 ton stuff that takes
24 hours do dry - Never use the 5 minute epoxy as it shrinks with
age, and what ever you assemble with it may fall apart a few
years from now). The problem with a Maple fret board is how to
sand/smooth the fret board without screwing up the finish. With
as rosewood, or ebony fretboard, you can sand them & since the
fret board is unfinished, you won't be removing anything that
would change the way that the fret-board is finished.
Jens
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2216.4 | Sounds like fun! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Certified Marshall-slut | Tue May 28 1991 16:14 | 16 |
| I've seen several maple bass necks that were fretless (probably
conversions). The thing I'd probably worry about on a maple neck would
be wear, as the strings tend to wear the fretboard on fretless basses
and you don't have a seperate fretboard to replace (ie, when it gets
worn too much and you've sanded it too thin, it's time for a new neck).
One of the coolest I've seen was a maple neck that had the frets pulled
and the slots filled with thin strips of ebony. I personally think
that leaving the fret tang in there looks kind of gross. As Jens
mentioned epoxy would be a good choice too. You can color it if you
don't want clear.
Be sure you don't leave a maple board unfinished, it gets gook off your
hands in the wood and looks nasty before very long.
Greg
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2216.5 | | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Tue May 28 1991 17:15 | 10 |
|
Any brand names for the epoxy?
Also, can I just leave the finish that's on the neck and fill
in the slots, or is it better to sand off the old finish and
re-coat it after filling in the slots?
-T
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2216.6 | refinish | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Certified Marshall-slut | Tue May 28 1991 17:56 | 5 |
| It'll be better to refinish the top of the fretboard after you do your
work. I don't think the finish usually goes under the fret edges, so
there will be more then just the slots unfinished.
Greg
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2216.7 | Iron the neck | AZUR::DOTTI | Ernesto Dotti - EIC Valbonne | Wed May 29 1991 05:54 | 7 |
| Depending on how the frets were installed, they could very easily come
off by warming them with an iron (the type you use for clothes at max
temp will do it).
You can then fill the holes with epoxy, nacre, ivory, wood of a
different color... Try a couple of frets (25th and higher...) first and
if the result is nice, do the rest of the neck.
|
2216.8 | The Jaco Method | ACKTHP::J_MARSHALL | | Tue Jun 11 1991 21:32 | 14 |
| There was an interview with Jaco Pastorius in Guitar Player magazine
7 or 8 years ago in which he described how he defretted and refinished
fingerboard on his '60 Fender Jazz bass (the famous "Bass of Doom").
If memory serves, he simply pulled the frets (they come out perpendicular
to the face of the fingerboard) and then filled the slots with boat epoxy.
He recommended Petit's Polypoxy. Then, and this is the key thing, he coated
the face of the fingerboard with more epoxy using many many coats with
sandings inbetween. This hard surface helps give a fretless bass its
characteristic "growl".
If you can find the old interview, I believe there are a few more details
in it.
Best of luck!
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2216.9 | close! | HAMER::KRON | ELECTRIFIED | Wed Jun 12 1991 14:53 | 4 |
| a small correction:
he didn't pull the frets he ground them down,leaving the tang in the
fingerboard.
-Bill
|
2216.10 | ...and keep the fretted neck | PIPPER::KELLYJ | Tone droid | Wed Jun 12 1991 16:06 | 1 |
| What about buying a fretless neck from Stew-Mac or equivalent?
|
2216.11 | Moot Point | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Wed Jun 12 1991 17:52 | 18 |
|
I've gotten rid of the bass in deal for a CZ101 synth.
I decided to get rid of the bass *before* did something drastic..
;^)
In any case I had considered a Stew-Mac fretless neck, since
they are available at a reasonable price. The downside was
that (I think!) they were true fretless necks w/o any dot markers
and also they would need a nut made for it, which I haven't the
skills (or the tools) to cut.
Thanks to everyone for the advice.
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