Now that the fingerboard is glued on we can start making some more progress. The fingerboard is a bit smaller than the neck for now so I chuck up a flush trim pattern bit and trim it back in a couple of passes.
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Looking nice so far.
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Originally I was planning to do the compound radius on the jointer but as I mentioned earlier my knives are starting to dull and they have a tendency to chip out the birdseye in particular so I'll use ye olde radius block instead.
I used my 16' radius and started with the sides of the fingerboard, sanding parallel to the edge of the neck, not the centerline of the fingerboard. After the edges are radiused I come back and sand along the string paths until I have a smooth radius and a flat path along the course of each string.
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To check the smoothness of the radius I make crossmarks on the length of the board, particularly the very edges, and use them as a sanding guide. The marks should come off evenly with just a few strokes per string path. If you get intermittent marks you need to continue sanding for smoothness.
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I mentioned paying special attention to the edge of the board as I find this to be a place that problems can happen. If you dont get a smooth radius all the way to the edge of the neck you can end up with gaps under the ends of your frets that can be very frustrating. For example this is a pic taken while I was radiusing the board. If you look at the g string side of the radius you will see it dip slightly on the edge because I havent made the radius true all the way out to the edge. The E string edge on the other hand is smoothly radiused all the way out to the edge. If I were to fret at this point I would have issues with fret ends on the G string side.
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Now that the board is radiused it is time to install frets. About ten minutes with a fretting hammer and we are in business.
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Next up I nip the ends with clippers. I find it important to clip from directly above the fret. This leaves a nice clean fret edge instead of twisting the tang sideways in the edge of the slot.
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Next I use a bastard cut file to smooth the ends of the frets to the fingerboard. This is actually a well worn plastic laminate file from Plasti-Cut and works wonders on metal. I can knock the frets down in a few strikes and as long as I dont hit the edge of the board at an angle I get almost no damage to the wood at all. Here you see filed frets and unfiled frets.
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I like to glue in my frets with CA, partially because I like the insurance and partially because I like the empty space under the frets filled as well. At this point I glue the slot by taping one side of the fingerboard off and flipping the neck over. I fill from the other side with CA until it crests over the top of the slot and then leave it to dry. Once dry I knock the CA back with a sanding block, cleaning the last edges of the frets along the way.
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Once the edges are clean I can use my bevel file to file the frets ends to a nice consistent angle.
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To get an idea of how flat the frets are I like to watch how light reflects off the frets. Position the neck so that a light reflects down the length of the frets. If your frets are even you will get one consistent , straight reflection down the fingerboard. The more uneven your frets are the more broken the path of the reflection will be. In the case of a compound radiused board you will also see the reflections follow straight down the center of the board but fan out toward the edges as you rotate the neck in the light.
This bass turned out particularly well. The frets are smooth from end to end and the compound radius looks straight as I move across the board. With only the lightest leveling this bass should hum.
Well its saturday morning and I've got the day free so expect some more progress soon.
