Fretboard Inlay Work?

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johnpace2

johnpace2

Well-known member
I'm curious about converting the dot inlays on my Gibson Explorer to something similar to what James Hetfield used on this famous guitar: http://www.montyjay.com/jameswhiteespexpmf.html

Any ideas as to whether this can be done for a few hundred $ or less? I don't want to do stickers.

Thanks! :rock:
 
Raised middle finger inlays? SO proletariat, old boy...

Steve
 
sah5150":iptj00s4 said:
Raised middle finger inlays? SO proletariat, old boy...

Steve

If anyone here knows about fretboard inlays it's gonna be Mr. sah5150. That kid loves him some inlays. Hey Steve.... did you buy that $104k custom shop Tele from NAMM this year? That thing single handedly emptied the rest of the abalone from the Pacific ocean and when Steve was looking at it, I literally saw little cartoon hearts floating around his head. ;)
 
sah5150":wl4dn9dw said:
Raised middle finger inlays? SO proletariat, old boy...

Steve

:2thumbsup: I know, I know, but I love that guitar!
 
Chubtone":246mkysb said:
sah5150":246mkysb said:
Raised middle finger inlays? SO proletariat, old boy...

Steve

If anyone here knows about fretboard inlays it's gonna be Mr. sah5150. That kid loves him some inlays. Hey Steve.... did you buy that $104k custom shop Tele from NAMM this year? That thing single handedly emptied the rest of the abalone from the Pacific ocean and when Steve was looking at it, I literally saw little cartoon hearts floating around his head. ;)
If it had been $208K I would have grabbed it, but at that price it was too shabby for my collection, old boy...

Steve
 
This guy is amazing, been to his shop. He did some custom work on my breedlove. His website sucks but he is awesome. Makes custom guitars too. Check his inlay section on the site, nothing compared to what I seen in his shop.


Guitarfix.com
 
johnpace2":3vzzagls said:
I'm curious about converting the dot inlays on my Gibson Explorer to something similar to what James Hetfield used on this famous guitar: http://www.montyjay.com/jameswhiteespexpmf.html

Any ideas as to whether this can be done for a few hundred $ or less? I don't want to do stickers.

Thanks! :rock:

John,
For inlay work, the wood is routed/carved, the inlays epoxied in, the whole board is sanded level (which also sets the final radius), the fret slots cut and the frets set and dressed.
The easiest way to perform this is, obviously, on a virgin board.

Changing the inlays with the frets in place isn't really an option.
The challenge is getting the inlays level to the fretboard after they're glued in.
Hand sanding is an option on the first few frets, but becomes virtually impossible on the upper registers due to how close the inlays are to the fret wire (because we have to sand with the wood grain).

Your best bet for achieving professional looking results is doing a re-fret after the inlay conversion.
The frets would be removed, dot inlays removed, new inlays routed and glued in and the board leveled.
The fret slots would be cleaned out and the new frets hammered in (or epoxied in if the fret slots are too sloppy from removal of the original wire).
Finally, the frets are leveled and dressed.

The job should be a relatively easy task for a competent luthier.
Price is going to be based on the luthier's experience level and schedule.


R~
 
studio289":34njnfxz said:
johnpace2":34njnfxz said:
I'm curious about converting the dot inlays on my Gibson Explorer to something similar to what James Hetfield used on this famous guitar: http://www.montyjay.com/jameswhiteespexpmf.html

Any ideas as to whether this can be done for a few hundred $ or less? I don't want to do stickers.

Thanks! :rock:

John,
For inlay work, the wood is routed/carved, the inlays epoxied in, the whole board is sanded level (which also sets the final radius), the fret slots cut and the frets set and dressed.
The easiest way to perform this is, obviously, on a virgin board.

Changing the inlays with the frets in place isn't really an option.
The challenge is getting the inlays level to the fretboard after they're glued in.
Hand sanding is an option on the first few frets, but becomes virtually impossible on the upper registers due to how close the inlays are to the fret wire (because we have to sand with the wood grain).

Your best bet for achieving professional looking results is doing a re-fret after the inlay conversion.
The frets would be removed, dot inlays removed, new inlays routed and glued in and the board leveled.
The fret slots would be cleaned out and the new frets hammered in (or epoxied in if the fret slots are too sloppy from removal of the original wire).
Finally, the frets are leveled and dressed.

The job should be a relatively easy task for a competent luthier.
Price is going to be based on the luthier's experience level and schedule.


R~

Thanks Russ!

Sounds like a $500-600 job in total, so I'm not sure it's worth it, but we'll see.
 
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