I have a piccolo mandolin that needs frets. the slots are approximately .013 - .014 inches. The customer brought it in with no frets. Has anyone worked on one of these? Were the original frets bar type or T type? It's made in Germany with a Marcelli tailpiece. I' like to leave the slots alone - not sure if the fret barber from Stew Mac can do this..Hate to spend $80 on a whim.
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I have replaced the older square frets with silver sodder .Just a few at a time and that works.
I have a old marten neck that has no frets so I will have to make them the right width. I will roll the silver sodder to make it the right thickness.
Ron
I like - for another patient :)
By far the easiest thing to do is cut the fret slots wider and re-fret it with easily available fret wire. This piece likely has little value, why spend a lot of time dolling up fret wire? Fret saws are inexpensive, if you don't already have one. What if/ when it comes back for another fret job? Make it easy on yourself and the next person. My 2 cents anyway.
I'd say T-frets. Slots that size would take bar fret wire so skinny as to be more than a bit nasty to play, so I'd not hesitate to recut the slots to fit regular modern mandolin T-frets. . .
T frets with wider slots gets the prize - bar frets that narrow just doesn't seem right.
The slots a lot wider than any T slot
Ron
0.014" is really narrow Ron
I'm with the other folks here. Why go to all that trouble? The instrument is not worthy of a museum restoration , so why kill yourself doing this work? Widen rye slots and put in some regular fret wire...
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