If the forum will indulge a question from a rank amateur, I need some advice as to how to evaluate the condition of a classical guitar that I believe has had its neck reset. I have the instrument on approval over the weekend but unfortunately the FedEx guy came late enough that I missed my chance to take it to my normal repair-luthier.
It's a 1976 "M. Sakurai" supervised by M. Kohno and given its age the guitar is in near immaculate condition. One major fingernail-sized ding on the cedar top and a few pinpricks here and there on the rosewood back but otherwise just about new looking. The action is low (0.110" treble, 0.135" bass) with tons of saddle remaining and the strings sit 0.550" above the top at the bridge. A straightedge on the frets intersects the bridge maybe 1/16" below the top of the bridge. Basically I couldn't be more pleased with the playability and all the pertinent angles and so forth.
Here's the thing. There is a slightly jagged break in the lacquer finish where the heel cap meets the top of the body. And the last three frets on the fretboard extension curve down toward the soundhole quite noticably. There isn't a hint of a "kink" in the fingerboard where it crosses the body joint at the 12th fret. Just that little curvature down at the last couple frets. By the way this guitar supposedly has a Fleta-style dovetail joint like all Kohno guitars so if there was a neck reset it did not involve a slipper foot as best I know.
Two questions. Am I correctly reading the fretboard-extension curve and break in the lacquer at the heel cap? Isn't that a sure sign of the neck being off at some point? And assuming it has had a neck job, I'm tempting to take that as a good thing. A guitar that's 32-years-old with a cedar top would surely have high action by now otherwise, even with nylon strings (although at 659mm scale length there's plenty of tension involved). I figure someone saved me a neck reset a few years hence and now it'll be a couple decades before I need any serious work done--assuming it's a good neck reset that is.
What should I look for as signs of a half-done or problematic neck reset on this kind of guitar. I know next to nothing about classical-guitar construction and setup. Honestly, I'm so happy the guitar is otherwise immaculate that I really don't want to look too hard for trouble unless it's something important, you know?
P.S. Is it just me or could that back wood almost pass for some old, well-quartered Brazilian instead of EIR.