so, i got a new (old) guitar recently, a 70's Les Paul. it was very much in need of a re-fret, so i asked around about who was the best guy, took it to him, and today it arrived home, with me £90 lighter. problem; all the frets look a little low, but the upper frets in particular have been filed so low that if i bend or use vibrato my fingers are rubbing on the wood of the fretboard.]
To me it sounds like the fingerboard was in need of levelling - not unusual on a guitar of any age let alone 30 years old
If it was just a fret dress that was being done, then I can understand that the frets would maybe need drastic levelling to rectify uneveness in the fingerboard
If the guitar has been refretted then surely he would have had an opportunity to level the fingerboard and thereby not have to do so much levelling of the frets as they would be going into a nice level board
That is what we do, but we do charge more for such a job as it is very time consuming - also London prices!
Bound neck refret £150 (unbound £130)
Level fingerboard £20
New nut £20-30 (+£25 Earvana if done during refret)clearly this is not good, and not what i wanted. i'm guessing it also needed a new nut? so, when i go back to him, should i look for the job redone for free, or look for a compromise, or write it off as a bad experience and get it done somewhere else?
Tough one to call - might be worth talking to him as you would not expect frets to be all worn out after a refret.
Ask if he levelled the fingerboard and about what problems he ran into.
If he is well known and well used locally he wont want a bad job to be out there or an unhappy customer
But if there is a lot more work required than he had originally quoted you for because of the uneven fingerboard, be man enough to offer to pay him for the additional work required to level the board (£20-30) if he is willing to redo the job for you as it will be time consuming to put it all right and that gesture will be an act of good faith.
also, he says that the previous frets were glued in, and as a result he couldn't avoid pulling out some bits of wood from the board, which have been rather ham-fistedly repaired. does this sound right, or is he covering up his own mistake? i was prepared to believe him until i saw the filed-to-nothing frets!
I usually heat the frets carefully with a soldering iron to break any glue joint first , but care must be taken when doing this .
I always assume frets are glued in & try heating them, so as not to be surprised when they are glued.
However some woods can be really prone to chipping when removing frets, and even very skilled techs have trouble with them.
Hope this helps