Hello,
I am interested in any/all methods to repair a bolt-on electric guitar neck that has significantly more neck relief on one side than it has on the other. I see this issue on a semi-regular basis and have not yet learned a reliable way to correct it. Thanks.
Kris
Nathan,
Could you clarify that you use a convex sanding beam? I've never seen one that wasn't flat or concave.
Thanks
Didn't have time to read the other posts so my apologies if any of this is redundant.
A refret can correct the relief and if your client does not want to go that route a fret dress by a skilled Luthier, not a novice or hobbyist, can correct relief too. It's an art though and not something that I can explain appropriately here or on any forum.
The advantage of the refret is full new fret height is mostly preserved where when correcting relief with a fret dress lots of fret height in certain regions may have to be removed and reduced.
It's easy to do, takes me about an hour and is always an individual effort with the degrees of correction being a function of how messed up the individual instrument you are working on is. Our fret dresses and set-ups are less than 1/2 the price of a refret.
I'm seeing that no effort is made these days by most f*ctories to correct relief making proper relief very much a luck of the draw thing.
Nathan,the pics in that photoessay are amazing. Some has both an eye and a great camera!
I don't see removing " neck twist" as necessary. Proper relief on treble and bass sides Is essential.
I see twist as a separate and usually irrelevant issue.
One down side to using a full length radius beam parallel to the neck is it gratuitously removes (or imparts!) twist.
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