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What's the action at the 12th fret? .002 at the next fret seems way too low.
I do refrets on parlor necks without an adjustable truss rod all the time. Here is what I do.
First the old frets are removed. The new frets are tapped in without glue after using a fret saw with a matching thickness to the new frets tang. Then the guitar is stringed to tension and "freezed" in it's position in my variant of the Erlewine neck jig. In the jig the strings and temporary mounted frets are removed and the fretboard is sanded to a very small relief, about 0.15 mm. I have a couple of aluminum beams milled in a CNC for proper 0.1, 0.15 and 0.20 mm relief. I use them to sand the fretboard and to crown the frets. I have tried adjustable beams (Katana) but they don't give the right even curve. Depending on the softness of the neck the fretboard/neck will have a slight backbow and a bit more backbow near the nut from the rotation force from the strings over the nut.
The guitar is removed from the jig for a proper refret. I put the strings back at tension again and mount it in the jig for the last crowning of the frets using the 0.1 mm relief sanding beam.
If a neck reset or any major work is done on the guitar, the guitar should be stringed to tension with the temporary frets a couple of days for the neck to settle in before doing the refret. I use the time to vibrate the guitar hanging in a closed cabinet with an aquarium air pump strapped to the top :-)
No, the beams are made by a pal of mine who owns a nice CNC router. It's an inveted relief BTW. I have worked with old parlor necks/refrets for a quite while dealing with this problem and this is the best method I've come up with so far. The process may take some time but the end result is predictable and great every time :-)
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