OK, moving on with the fretting. BTW, I know my bench area is a total mess, but what I have been doing is a messy process. That done, my next task will be to clean up, so please excuse.
First, I needed to install the position markers
Done, just pau dots
And here are the frets, ready to go
I have polished these to just tiny hair under 0.060" on a flat 150 grit sanding block
Checking and adjusting the fret slots
Aiming for an easy 0.060 fit. A few strokes of the slot edges with the file takes care of any tight slots, about a 5 minute process
First 6 frets installed
Light bead of glue on fret, push part way in by hand, and tap down tight with my cobbler's hammer
All frets installed
This took about 20 minutes
Then leveled the frets
First, I put black marker on fret tops. Then used 80 grit on the edge of a 2 foot level, alternating with the Stew-Mac block to maintain the radius. After a few strokes, I checked for any unusually high frets and gave them a few taps to seat them better. Finished down to 400 grit. Whole leveling took 10 minutes.
I did a rough crowning to knock the sharp edges off
After I clip the fret ends, I will finish the crowning, polish the frets, and clean up the board.
This is the third board that I have done like this, and the process has become routine. Once I have the frets ready, it really doesn't take any longer than regular frets. Takes a bit of good attention to details with the slots and such. I am comfortable, at this point, to relegate standard frets to an option on my guitars. Just ordered up a bigger chunk of 0.062" spring tempered phosphor bronze.
I am willing to help anybody try this. I can supply shaped frets, ready to go....takes me about an hour of shop time and $5 worth of metal. You will need a different fret slotting blade, but it is cheap. Just ask, and I will post up all the details. The improvement in tone is very real.
G