Hey -
I just thought post this to see what the feedback would be like:
I have a Gitane 250M, the petite bouch with all maple sides and back. The fret markers on the top edge neck and on the fingerboard are European style - 5, 7, 10, 12.
I thought I could think my way through the 10 fret marker, but my other primary guitar ( a beautiful Dell'Arte Homage ) is fret marked western style at 5, 7, 9, 12. In the heat of playing, I tend to get flummoxed by the european marker.
I am planning to have a luthier move the fret marker back one fret. The plan is fill the existing marker either with a plug, or a black marker to simply blend in. A new white marker will be installed at position 9. The markers on the top of the neck will be adjusted also.
Currently I have majik-markered out the top edge and put a dot of White Out fret 9. This helps if I keep the fretboard tilted away from me, but if I glance at the fingerboard the the trouble starts.
The initial quote is between 100$ and 200$ to do this.
Has anyone else done this?
What say you???
Comments
Another question I have for the maple Saga is fret buzz. I have raised the action to a full 4 mm at the 12th and still get a buzz on the bottom strings. Anyone else have this problem? Do I need to do some fret filing? there must be a high fret above the 12th.
That 10th fret marker really bugged me too, at first. What you're proposing sounds kinda costly considering the price of the guitar - I think you'd be better off spending that money on a good setup, for sure a new bridge and maybe even a tailpiece or tuners as these are generally regarded as the weakest spots on Gitanes. To get back to the fret marker, one trick that's working for me is just not looking at the neck so much. I'm reminded of classical players who look at the conductor and the music simultaneously- never at thier instruments. Since I've stopped looking at the neck, I'm finding I can play for longer periods of time, as my spine isn't all twisted around.
Hey Dwannabe,
One of my Gitanes arrived with 'fret sprout' and alot of buzzing. A levelling and dressing of the frets cured the problem. Any competent luthier should be able to do this for you.
Good luck,
David
Cheers
Really!--don't sweat the small stuff--you get used to anything after awhile!
I'm pretty certain the Saga will sound better than the Dell Arte in any blindfold test--you get used to the french fret markers after a week.
Stu
Now as for your guitar tech questions... I pointed a friend to some of these this morning - I'll point you at them as well. Ladies and gentlemen, may I present Frank Ford, the godfather of guitar restoration, and his magical mystical website of luthiery knowledge....
About what's involved in moving / removing inlays.
http://209-239-165-10.oak.inreach.net/F ... inlay.html
How to find what's causing your buzz.
http://209-239-165-10.oak.inreach.net/F ... tbuzz.html
Personally - I found two bass string buzzes on my 250M. One was caused by that darned cheap tailpiece ... it vibrates / hums / rattles / whatever... at certain frequencies. I glued the plastic in place better and backed it with leather. Also - I did a fret level on it... which cured a WHOLE bunch of little playability issues. Look at the end of this article to see how Frank levels the frets once he's installed them. It's simple, it's brilliant, I've tried it, it works.
http://209-239-165-10.oak.inreach.net/F ... ret01.html
Great links. Really useful stuff.
I wanted to mention in my earlier post that the 10th fret marker seems to make more sense when playing gypsyjazz, but I couldn't back it up with any music theory as I'm an ear player. I thought I was just crazy, but it seems that no matter what tune I'm butchering, when I do look down at the neck, I'm hitting that 10th fret alot more often than the 9th. Could it have something to do with all that demented augminished stuff? I would love it if someone could chime in here with an explanation.
And surf music. I've always loved it almost as much as Django. When I heard Jogenson's Hot Club style take on the Shadow's "Man of Mystery" I thought 'Ah-Ha - someone else is making that connection, too!'. There's got to be a technical explanation for this as well. Or maybe not. I don't even know what key I'm playing in sometimes, but it's sure more fun than playin the blues (unless it's 'Minor Blues', of course).
Thanks for posting,
David
Cheers
Hey, I visited John Greven the other day, he's making a repro finger-rest for a cool old pre-war archtop of mine. That was inspiring. He's really talented - some of the project's he's working on were amazing - he had a big modified jumbo design with Sitka that was almost nice enough to convert me to playing bluegrass. His guitars bark - but have a tight bell-like clarity - they don't just make tones... they launch tones. This big round-shouldered beast with the bearclaw top is nifty too. http://www.grevenguitars.com/links.htm