fingerboard sanding grit?
Posted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 9:46 pm
I appreciate the advice and suggestions I've gotten so far. Moving right along.....
I spent a few hours this evening happily sanding away at a fingerboard I am making. So far, so good, it seems. The fret slots are cut and the fingerboard is tapered in width. I sanded the fingerboard crown in with a shaped block like the ones Stew-Mac sells and a whole lot of effort, using 80-grit sandpaper, then with 150, 320, and 500-grit sandpaper. The fingerboard was double-sided-taped into a frame I made that allowed the shaped block to travel along the fretboard and remain square to the fretboard. It looks nicer than the fingerboard on the guitar I'm playing, so I'm thinking that that job might be done. Is it? At what grit fineness do folks call it a day when sanding rosewood fingerboards? Is the final sanding grit parameter something that varies with the wood species? Will it look better by sanding with 800-grit or 100-grit?
Thanks very much.
I spent a few hours this evening happily sanding away at a fingerboard I am making. So far, so good, it seems. The fret slots are cut and the fingerboard is tapered in width. I sanded the fingerboard crown in with a shaped block like the ones Stew-Mac sells and a whole lot of effort, using 80-grit sandpaper, then with 150, 320, and 500-grit sandpaper. The fingerboard was double-sided-taped into a frame I made that allowed the shaped block to travel along the fretboard and remain square to the fretboard. It looks nicer than the fingerboard on the guitar I'm playing, so I'm thinking that that job might be done. Is it? At what grit fineness do folks call it a day when sanding rosewood fingerboards? Is the final sanding grit parameter something that varies with the wood species? Will it look better by sanding with 800-grit or 100-grit?
Thanks very much.