I need some help with fret level a compund radius fretboard, I have searched the internet with no results. Do you level them the same as a normal 10", 12" radius neck or is there a special method for 12-16 radius guitar necks. The guitar I have is a Jackson DXMG Dinky and the frets are a little dinged up on a couple of them. I have the guitar ripped apart right now as I am cleaning all the gunk off it from the previous owners neglect, and figured I would do this now since I have the guitar apart. Any help and advice would be greatly appreciated. I am using a Aluminum flat beam for leveling and not radius wood blocks just to let you know.
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I need some help with fret leveling a compund radius fretboard
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I am no guitar tech, but I have leveled the frets on many Charvel necks. I use a very narrow aluminum channel with 320 paper glued to it. I first mark the frets with a sharpie so I can tell were I am removing material, and try to follow the radius the best I can while sanding. Then I file the round top back into the fret's and polish with finer and finer sand paper, and finish with 0000 steal wool. I know this may not be the correct way but it has always worked
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I use 1" sandpaper rolls on an old 1" wide aluminum level that I lapped flat on a surface plate. I start in the middle of the board and just keep the beam inline with where the strings would be as I move across the board. Then go back to the middle and go to the other side of the board. Of course, don't sit in the middle too long..Every man dies... Not every man really lives!!
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I just don't want to mess up my frets lol. I have never done this before that's why I asked. I have been practicing on an old neck I have. I just want to know the best way to do it. Some people use radius blocks and some flat beam. Some say to follow the strings, and some a fan motion. I am very confused.
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Radius blocks will shape a finger board but I have never seen any one level frets that way. If you want your action low you need the frets flat from the nut to the last fret under the strings, this is best done with a long narrow perfectly flat beam, or file, or level, or what ever, but it must be flat. starting on the outside or the middle will just be your choice if done evenly it will make no difference.
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Originally posted by SylentCommando View PostI just don't want to mess up my frets lol. I have never done this before that's why I asked. I have been practicing on an old neck I have. I just want to know the best way to do it. Some people use radius blocks and some flat beam. Some say to follow the strings, and some a fan motion. I am very confused.Every man dies... Not every man really lives!!
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I have always used 6" long 2.25" wide flat aluminum beam for leveing. I always do the whole fretboard since the beam is wide enough to do it all. I am still confused. Some people say follow the strings and go from right to left going up and down the fret board and other say center to edge and center to edge on the other side. I was also told to the fretboard has the compound radius and not the frets, so I don't know what to believe. I wish there was some Luthiers in here to help me out.
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As long as you are taking material off in an even fashion as to no flatten out the radius it really is only preference. the goal is to make the frets level under the strings so you can have lower string height with out fret buzz. whom ever told you that the finger board has a radius but not the frets I would asume has never looked at one very close and ain't got a clue. But if you are this concerned about how to do it correctly(which can be done several ways and get same results) maybe you should have a pro do it and watch how they do it.
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Originally posted by paranoid View PostAs long as you are taking material off in an even fashion as to no flatten out the radius it really is only preference. the goal is to make the frets level under the strings so you can have lower string height with out fret buzz. whom ever told you that the finger board has a radius but not the frets I would asume has never looked at one very close and ain't got a clue. But if you are this concerned about how to do it correctly(which can be done several ways and get same results) maybe you should have a pro do it and watch how they do it.Every man dies... Not every man really lives!!
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The frets are dinged up in the front register from fret 1, and some are uneven as well, that's why I figured I would level it. I don't want someone else to do it, I work on my own guitars, I just have never done a compound radius fretboard before.I have practiced fret leveling on old necks when I started, so I didn't want to mess up my LTD guitar when I leveled it.
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The quick answer to your question is that you level in the string path. Dan Erlewine has a ton of great info on the subject.
Leveling beams are great, and I definitely wouldn't level frets with a radius block.
Buy this book; you'll find it helpful. http://www.stewmac.com/How-To/Books/...p-By-Step.html
These are like watching great TV. Even if you just get the first DVD, you'll be glad you did.
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