Word, brother, Amen.
That 'new fret' sound is worth its weight in gold. Just replaced mine
Friday and I'm a happy camper again. Actual replacement per fret goes
pretty quickly but assembling all the tools, finding my notes and
gauges, etc can take the time*. For years I just used a match (or a
butterknife over a stove flame) but have converted to the soldering
iron recently since I'm currently stuck with a user-unfriendly
electric range. With the stove method I can get just the right
temperature and can not only burn through the gut (using the duller
edge) but can put a big flat swedge on the end of the gut with no ugly
black char.
It's surprising how different a sound one gets from the new fret edge.
That old flattened surface can really affect the ringtime and tone
and, like the frog in the boiling water, I never notice its arrival.
With new frets I'm always surprised at how much less pressure I need
w/ my left fingers to get a clean note - energy I'd far prefer to use
for accuracy.
Just my $.02,
Sean
*I'm reminded of the old saying: He didn't have time to do it right
the first time but he had plenty of time to do it over.
On Feb 9, 2014, at 3:35 PM, Dan Winheld wrote:
"I could whittle with a utility knife, but
that would be wasteful and time consuming."
"I find that a surgical saw, something like what one can find even on
Amazon (Satterlee Bone Saw 13") is an ideal tool. A very thin blade
with sharp teeth. Just make sure you do not cut yourself in the
process... It is actually ideal for many uses with wood, bone and
plastics."
Guys,
Why would either of you go to all that bother, rather than merely
replacing the fret? Of course, an emergency situation (5 minutes
before show time, during rehearsal, or stuck out somewhere beyond easy
reach of the postal service & no spare gut) is another story.
I could remove & replace 10 gut frets in the time it would take you to
whittle a single proper shim out of a "1/2 inch by 1/2 inch by 10
inches ( 1cm x 1cm x 20cm)" piece of anything. That is, single frets.
The more traditional doubles (still routinely used by the viol
players) would take a little more time.
Fret changing is not hard at all, once you've done a few and get into
the rhythm of it. Soon you will be getting them so tight that you will
have to back off to keep from breaking the thinner ones, and even that
big, bad 1st fret will only take the slightest more aggression to make
as tight as necessary. Thomas Mace has a pretty good tutorial on
frets, as I remember. So does Dan Larson on his website, and no doubt
there are others easily available. Catch me at the right time I'll do
it for you, and show you how. A cigarette lighter, fingernail
clippers, and maybe (strictly optional) a small pliers for the 1st fret.
The business with the surgical saw is what I paid a professional
luthier to do recently when I had bone body frets put on my lute-
frets 10 & up. He messed up my 9th & 8th frets leveling the new bone
frets, and it took me 3 minutes or less to replace them practically
under his nose in the shop.
Happy fretting! (It almost gets fun)
Dan
I could whittle with a utility knife, butthat would be wasteful and
time consuming.
alexander r.
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