I have 70's Martin D 35 that came in with over .020" relief in the neck... the fret board had already been thinned to about .155" at the nut in the center of the board...no doubt adding to the weakness of the neck.. the guitar had a fairly recent re fret so rather than suggest a new board and re-fret I thought I could get the neck with the thin board to straighten out with re-enforcement.
I pulled the neck and did the carbon fiber rod / epoxy re-enforcing in the square tube truss rod, clamped the neck straight and let it set up for 24 hrs. After re-setting the neck and string up, relief was reduced but only to about .014" ... I was hoping for about .008" or less and so was the owner.
So... I removed the thinned down fret board, planning on replacing it with a new one.... and with
the board off and a straight edge on the face of the neck I had the same .014" relief in the center of the neck. Now in an attempt to find out what is bent, the wood or the truss, I heat up the tube and get it out of the neck and the tube itself has the same relief. I've read posts that say these tubes don't usually take a bend but this one sure has and to make matters worse I have epoxied in that curve forever. My first thought was to get a new square tube rod and start over but on a whim I flip the rod over and push it snugly into the neck reversing the curve from relief to back-bow ....now the
neck is straight with just a little back-bow ... around .007" measured at the nut without even gluing in the truss rod...!!!
Well I think I have a good feeling about gluing this thing up with the flipped truss rod and a new fret
board but not sure… I was just wondering how you guys would handle something like this and in particular.... how to glue the truss rod. I will be using hide glue of course and I'm wondering if I should glue in the rod first and then glue the fret board on after the rod has dried or can you glue both the board and rod at the same time...
this is not my first time working on one of these necks but it is the first time I've had one of these truss rods out.
Sorry for the long post and thank you so much for the
forum and the wonderful expertise that is so graciously shared.
Fritz
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