Roasted ash neck/fingerboard
-
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Tue Aug 28, 2012 4:30 am
Roasted ash neck/fingerboard
I have some plans for a new build (a series of three to start with). The guitar will be completely made out of thermo-ash. Because I want to make a one piece neck/fingerboard like the maple necks from fender, with carbon fibre as trussrod strip, I was wondering if roasted white ash will be hard enough for a fretboard. If not, are there super tough finishes I can put on the fretboard to toughen it up.
- Peter Wilcox
- Posts: 1319
- Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 1:31 am
- Location: Northeastern California
Re: Roasted ash neck/fingerboard
I used polyurethane on some bass mahogany fingerboards years ago. One I jammed with every week for a couple of years didn't show any wear. I never really played the others much.
Maybe I can't fix it, but I can fix it so no one can fix it
-
- Posts: 504
- Joined: Mon Feb 27, 2012 11:34 am
Re: Roasted ash neck/fingerboard
I have no experience with ash for necks or finger boards. I also have never finished a fretboard until just recently - I was asked to refret a lovely old Fender bass which had a lacquered maple fretboard. It was one of the biggest hassles I have ever experienced and I have simply vowed to never do another one. I'm very happy to let someone else do it, and I sort of learned why they charge so much.
Mine was even easy from the standpoint that it was lacquer, which I can retouch. If it had been some sort of modern catalyzed poly finish I wouldn't have even tried.
I also have no experience with roasted anything but I do know that Warmoth cautions folks buying theirs that it is possible to split the headstock when installing tuners - the suggest reaming with the proper sized reamer.
Mine was even easy from the standpoint that it was lacquer, which I can retouch. If it had been some sort of modern catalyzed poly finish I wouldn't have even tried.
I also have no experience with roasted anything but I do know that Warmoth cautions folks buying theirs that it is possible to split the headstock when installing tuners - the suggest reaming with the proper sized reamer.
- Peter Wilcox
- Posts: 1319
- Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 1:31 am
- Location: Northeastern California
Re: Roasted ash neck/fingerboard
Two of my polyurethane fingerboards were fretless. The fretted one I rediused and sanded before I applied the poly, then after that I cut the fret slots and fretted it, so a refret (that it will never need anyway) would not be a problem.
Maybe I can't fix it, but I can fix it so no one can fix it