I have a 1965 D18 on the bench for the well-known 'Top bulge at the bass side of the bridge' problem, plus minor intonation tweaks and action adjustment.
Firstly, thanks to Frank - I glued back the separated brace under the bulge with marine epoxy, using clamping cauls cut from 3/8 acrylic sheet, as shown on the Frets site. Worked perfectly! And I could see what I was doing, through the plastic cauls. The bulge had been left untreated for several years and needed substantial clamping force to get the outside almost flat again. I didn't want to bruise the shape of the brace underneath, so I laid cling-film over the brace and moulded an exact-fit clamping pad with magic plastic on a hardwood block. This also worked better than I expected - fitted well enough to hold itself in place while I was placing the clamps.
Anyway, back to the neck.... After the usual fine adjustments to saddle and nut, and a thin stepped bit of bone glued to the front edge of the nut to give a little compensation at that end also, it plays easier, and much more sweetly in tune.
The only thing which stops it from playing _even better_ is the Martin non-adjustable neck which currently has about 25 thou relief.. I'd prefer about 5-10 thou . I could file the fairly high frets, but I wondered if there is any established method for making a slight adjustment to neck relief on this era of martin,without doing anything as invasive as skimming the fingerboard. Is this a problem one has to live with or has someone come up with a slick way of making this adjustment appropriate for a fine quality old guitar?