I had this done professionally many years ago (17 years ago?) to one of my basses when I was a pro player. It was a neck thru
ibanez musician, no chance of a bolton replacement for that. They did remove the frets and filled them with a light wood (but very thin and fine, not super easy to see but there if you wanted to look for it). I would have prefered no fret lines, but it turned out to be helpful when I'd lend it to my second bass player when I'd play guitar in our fusion band - he wasn't as comfortable with fretless but loved the tone, fret lines were perfect.
Anyway, it worked great for several years, but eventually started buzzing like crazy in all sorts of different spots. the fingerboard of the bass was ebony - amazing how regular pro playing with roundwounds on a fretless can wear down even something as hard as ebony...
So I pawned it for almost nothing. Sad but true. It wasn't worth repairing, would have cost more than the original instrument due to how it was made which would have caused lots of problems when removing and replacing the fingerboard. Apparently sanding it wasn't a cure since the wood they filled the fret holes with was different in texture than the fingerboard which made everything wear unevenly.
Anyway, defretting cost me like $300 back then by the big pro in vancouver at the time (Shuriva woodcraft, not sure if the spelling is right). Ichi did it for me but I wore it out after about 8 years or hard pro playing. That's sad. But I do recommend taking it down to the fingerboard rather than filling it over the existing frets - that must look damn ugly... never ever seen that in my life after playing 70 or so different fretless basses in my career. One of the nice things about fretless is the thin ness of the fingerboard, the delicate way you can play. make it thick and all epoxy covered and it would have to be a pretty thin fingerboard in the first place not to end up being a huge nasty thick beast to play. However I HAVE heard of defretting it, filling the fret holes, and THEN epoxying it or similar. I think that's sort of what pedulla does (well not the defretting part since they're fretless to begin with).
I will say one thing - making that musician bass fretless improved it ten times. The only fretted bass I ever loved after that was my alembic series 1. Takes $7000 to make a fretted bass that's as good as a well made and well maintained fretless costing only $1000. From my experience anyway.
Cheers
notCardio said:
I seem to recall you estimating about $40/fret for a fret job, how much for a DE-fret job?
I'm toying with the idea of having a bass professionally de-fretted, because it's not the standard P or J that you can get aftermarket fretless necks for.
And before someone gives me the 'hell, just do it yerself' routine, I might buy a cheapo and play around with it, but I would like to have something of quality that will be finished while I'm still breathing.
Thanks.