I also use CA for gluing in frets. That's pretty much standard practice for many luthiers. Many epoxies dry very hard too.
I find the 5-minute epoxy doesn't have enough open time to fret a whole neck, and often dries too flexible.
The glue just helps getting tight ends. You really want good a mechanical fit to hold the frets in.
As far as the glue helping the tone... I doubt it. It's not enough glue mass compared to the frets/neck. It's too thin to matter. Unless you have an overly wide slow and the fret is loose, and being held in by glue. You don't want that!
It's like the whole debate on whether finish changes the tone of a solid body. I'd say no, but lack of finish allows moisture into the wood and that changes the tone.
The frets on Parker guitars are glued on. They don't have tangs or slots.
I find the 5-minute epoxy doesn't have enough open time to fret a whole neck, and often dries too flexible.
The glue just helps getting tight ends. You really want good a mechanical fit to hold the frets in.
As far as the glue helping the tone... I doubt it. It's not enough glue mass compared to the frets/neck. It's too thin to matter. Unless you have an overly wide slow and the fret is loose, and being held in by glue. You don't want that!
It's like the whole debate on whether finish changes the tone of a solid body. I'd say no, but lack of finish allows moisture into the wood and that changes the tone.
The frets on Parker guitars are glued on. They don't have tangs or slots.
Comment