Got a question for the tech-savvy. Yesterday, I got my Les Paul back from a full re-fret. It had many frets that were so worn out that when you bended a note in specific places it would die out before the pitch was up a half step. I also wanted slightly bigger frets so I considered this drastic and expensive operation necessary. Overall, the problem was solved and the job looks and feels good, but to my frustration there are still some dead spots:
14th fret on the high E gives the same note as 15th. Likewise with 20th and 21st. Only on the high E string. 10th fret on the D string buzzes a lot, all other strings on that fret die out when bended. I have raised the action quite a bit to see if it would help, and it does a little but not nearly enough to make it playable. It seems to me that these frets are simply lower than the rest.
The tech said it might still need a neck adjustment, so I will definitely do that when I get the wrench for it (didn't bring one when I moved) but this doesn't seem to me like something that would be fixed by just that. After all, the 10th fret problem did not occur with the old worn out frets, and 14th and 20th fret on the E string were not dead spots before, but they are now. Another thing is, I've read that on a les paul, the high frets do not really respond to a neck adjustment, so I highly doubt it will fix my problem.
I'd really like to have this guitar play as nice as it sounds, so help me out please, what should I do?
Cheers.