View Full Version : Fret-sanding?
Nociceptor
05-15-2006, 02:24 AM
So I was thinking, I still like the sound of frets (for slap and ****) but I also love the slide of a fretless . . . so is it possible to just sand or file down the frets to make them a little less obtrusive? Or am I just smokin way too much of the wacky weed?
Az_Holl
05-15-2006, 05:46 AM
You could make it fretless and get a slap plate. That seems a bit more sensible than sanding your frets down.
Akira
05-15-2006, 06:13 AM
A. I don't think that would make it sound any more fretless.
B. Studies have linked nickel dust to lung cancer in rats.
Az_Holl
05-15-2006, 06:45 AM
A. I don't think that would make it sound any more fretless.
B. Studies have linked nickel dust to lung cancer in rats.
Bah, Pepsi Max gives you cancer. Accidentely breathing in a little bit, once probably wont hurt.
*not condoneing the snorting of nickel*
wicked_child
05-15-2006, 07:18 AM
i dunno if this would work but how about sanding down the frets under the D and G strings? so you'll have a fretted E and A strings while having a defretted D and G strings. saw that concept somewhere.
pitchfork
05-15-2006, 09:06 AM
Just buy a fretless and get a slap plate.
Peg Dizzler
05-15-2006, 05:10 PM
The majority of fretwire is made from copper.
Knowledge++
Son of Magni
05-15-2006, 05:23 PM
The majority of fretwire is made from copper.
Knowledge++
Copper fret wire? Are you kidding?
So I was thinking, I still like the sound of frets (for slap and ****) but I also love the slide of a fretless . . . so is it possible to just sand or file down the frets to make them a little less obtrusive? Or am I just smokin way too much of the wacky weed?
Since I'm mainly a fretless player but would like the possibility of a conventional slap sound, I have thought about doing just what you're talking about. Very low, smooth, narrow frets. But I haven't built it yet.
LewsTherin
05-15-2006, 05:29 PM
The majority of fretwire is made from copper.
Knowledge++
Copper fret wire? Are you kidding?
He's right. Its a mix of copper, nickel, and sometimes zinc. Its typically only about 20% nickel, and 50%+ copper.
Son of Magni
05-15-2006, 05:34 PM
He's right. Its a mix of copper, nickel, and sometimes zinc. Its typically only about 20% nickel, and 50%+ copper.
Ah, normally considered a nickel alloy. But anyways, I wasn't aware there was that much copper in them.
In any case, you don't sand frets you file them. So if you were to get a good file for fret leveling you could lower them, then re-crown them to get really low smooth frets.
Peg Dizzler
05-15-2006, 08:00 PM
He's right. Its a mix of copper, nickel, and sometimes zinc. Its typically only about 20% nickel, and 50%+ copper.
Yeah it's something like that. I know the standard is 17% nickel; any higher is too difficult to produce, any lower is just too soft. I know at least 50% is copper though. I'd have to look it up again. :p
I do want to try stainless steel frets though. They're hard to shape when you first install that, but after that they basically last forever. I know some luthiers use them and the only production company that I know of that uses them is Parker.
LewsTherin
05-15-2006, 08:03 PM
Yeah it's something like that. I know the standard is 17% nickel; any higher is too difficult to produce, any lower is just too soft. I know at least 50% is copper though. I'd have to look it up again. :p
I do want to try stainless steel frets though. They're hard to shape when you first install that, but after that they basically last forever. I know some luthiers use them and the only production company that I know of that uses them is Parker.
Warmoth has them as an option too, although in a fairly limited number of sizes.
hellonearth07
05-15-2006, 08:23 PM
the only thing to watch for in stainless frets is a difference in tone. I have yet to hear 2 guitars side by side with each type of fret job to hear the difference, but i heard of people that liked the tone stainless makes, and others that absolutely hate it
Peg Dizzler
05-16-2006, 05:06 PM
Well stainless steel is much harder, so I'm sure you can imagine the tone difference. It's probably noticeable too, because it's in direct contact with the strings. :p
I'd imagine stainless creates more sustain and has a brighter sound than nickel, but on the downside, I imagine it would also kill the "wood tone" of whatever neck wood/fretboard wood is in the guitar, maybe body too.
t3h_m013
06-22-2006, 11:30 AM
if you started with a fretted and defretted it except the very top fret, would that work as a slap plate? might have to file it a bit, but im considering trying it.
pitchfork
06-22-2006, 12:41 PM
I doubt it, when you fret anything it would just give loads of fret buzz
the101er
06-22-2006, 04:30 PM
Can someone explain a slap-plate please?
LewsTherin
06-22-2006, 07:11 PM
Can someone explain a slap-plate please?
its a metal plate installed on a fretless.
its so that:
a) your slapping sounds more like fretted slap than slap on a regular fretless
b) supposedly, slapping with rounds on a fretless will tear up the end of the board. its also to "protect" the fingerboard.
Low_End_Communications
06-22-2006, 07:22 PM
You are not going to get a fretless tone from a bass with frets. Impossible. You can get the smoothness of slides and vibrato by using very low, shallow frets, like mandolin fret wire, ala Leland Sklar.
If you're going to leave the last fret in, you're going to have to file it down pretty severely if you hope to get low action.
Slap plates are kind of rare, but when you think of it, the string is coming down on the last couple frets during slap, but what abouting popping? The string is pulled up and then comes down on a larger area of the fingerboard.
It'd probably be cheaper for an entire refret with mandolin fretwire.
sunshineplaysbass
06-22-2006, 07:38 PM
A. I don't think that would make it sound any more fretless.
B. Studies have linked nickel dust to lung cancer in rats.
Rats aren't humans, it's been proven that rats aren't always a good indicator of problems, keep in mind every part of their body is smaller so more susceptible to illness.....The only good indicator of illness in humans in humans...but i believe the Geneva Convention doesn't like people making tests on humans. hah
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