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changing my ibanez to a fretless


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[quote name='cai!' post='48177' date='Aug 21 2007, 09:41 AM']hmmm ive decided that because my ibanez is sitting round giving me evils i might as well turn it fretless :)

would the rosewood on the neck be ok to use? or would i need to give it a light varnish coat or just replace the whole thing?

thank you for any help[/quote]

The rosewood should be fine, but personally I wouldn't use roundwounds on it - go for flats. As opposed to varnish, just use lemon oil for a natural finish.


Hamster

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[quote name='cai!' post='48177' date='Aug 21 2007, 09:41 AM']hmmm ive decided that because my ibanez is sitting round giving me evils i might as well turn it fretless :)

would the rosewood on the neck be ok to use? or would i need to give it a light varnish coat or just replace the whole thing?

thank you for any help[/quote]

Yes, the rosewood would be OK. You can varnish it (as did Jaco) but you don't need to. Varnish will also change the tone but not necessarily for the better. You should be aware that once you defret a bass you wipe a considerable amount from its value whilst sometimes ending up with a bass you don't like very much because, for example, it doesn't have the same sound characteristics as a fretless as it had fretted. If you have enough money for a defret (£80-100) or a new board (£100+), and you really want to keep the bass in question, I would suggest holding on a little longer and getting a luthier to build a replica neck (£200ish) with a fretless board, that way you have a very versatile fretted/fretless bass. As long as the necks are identical and you play the same strings on both (and with similar action), you can swap them in about 5 minutes.
Good luck
Chris

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haha cheers guy :)
about the value... its in pretty bad condition anyways so im gona have to repaint it (purple or use a dark wood stain on it :huh:)
and its an ibanez gsr200 but one of the older versions that only has three tone/pickup/volume controllers an you cant find them any where lol
and i brought it for 75 quid as a first bass an i think i could make somethin pretty cool out of it with money because no one would buy it! hahaha

wouldnt rubbing oil on the fingerboard affect the strings abit? and good advice on using flats

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[quote name='cai!' post='48186' date='Aug 21 2007, 10:10 AM']wouldnt rubbing oil on the fingerboard affect the strings abit? and good advice on using flats[/quote]

Well, you don't want to use too much oil, just enough to soak in. :) As for your question, technically yes, but measurably and practically, no.

Hamster

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Are you DIYing or paying for a defret?

Baby oil is OK for the fretboard (it is mineral oil and 99.n% the same as lemon oil) although I shellaced mine and wet N dried with baby oil to finish.

[url="http://www.geocities.com/charlesarms/"]http://www.geocities.com/charlesarms/[/url]
[url="http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?t=275139"]http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?t=275139[/url]
[url="http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?p=3869850"]http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?p=3869850[/url]
[url="http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?t=291119"]http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?t=291119[/url]
[url="http://largemouth.wordpress.com/"]http://largemouth.wordpress.com/[/url]
[url="http://fios.jefftrout.com:8080/fretless/"]http://fios.jefftrout.com:8080/fretless/[/url]

Edited by mhuk
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[quote name='cai!' post='48923' date='Aug 22 2007, 01:11 PM']if i were to d.i.y. it how would i remove the frets?

like a chisel or something? because it sounds alot cheaper to do it your self :)

thanks agen guys :huh:[/quote]

Have a looky here - [url="http://www.geocities.com/charlesarms"]DIY defret guide[/url]

Hamster

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You see quite a lot of DIY defrets on ebay. They tend to ge very cheap due to splintered and uneven fretboards, porly filled slots and sometimes damaged finish on the neck. Like everything in life, it all seems easy when someone shows you how (Jaco made playing the bass look pretty simple), but it's a different matter when you do it. Although defretting isn't the most complex task, it requres good tools, a good working area where you can lock down the neck, and a degree of patience and diligence. If you have all of those, go for it :)
Chris

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If you are going to do it yourself you may find it helps to heat the fret by placing a soldering iron on the fret then nipping it out with a pair of electric clippers, these help to pull the fret up aswell as pressing on the fretboard, therefore minimizing chips.

I Here is a good site to show you how to get the frets out properly:

[url="http://www.frets.com/FRETSPAGES/Luthier/Technique/Guitar/Frets/D35Refret/D35refret1.html"]http://www.frets.com/FRETSPAGES/Luthier/Te...D35refret1.html[/url]

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