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Here is the culprit. A compression truss rod that had glue on the threads from manufacturing where the truss had simply stuck and couldn´t be adjusted anymore. What happens is that the truss breaks instead. How this bass got through QC just amazes me.

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 Here´s the other end (headstock end) where the threads were contaminated with glue. 

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Here is the middle stage of neck routing. This is where you can see how exact the neck is made. I made purple heart reinforcements. Neck was too weak.

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New fretboard on and ready for fine sanding, trimming and fretting.

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trimming. Time consuming. As always, you don’t want to remove excess in one go.

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soon finished.

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There, ready for frets.

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Fretted with a harder NEO fret.

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Bevelling off fret ends, later rounding them with a special file.

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Better than original bass. Sounded much more open and clear. It’s NOT the pickups making the sound. Lol.

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Ebony zero fret nut. The height of the nut is limited to the frets so no removal of the nut is necessary for fret dressing. Clever.

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This guy is amazing! I always love it when we get together for discussions about life, basses, food and he is a big Whiskey aficionado! The bass now sports a fantastic response all over the fretboard and has a fantastic low B string undistinguishable from the E string. As it should be. Some would say scrap the bass but there was clearly a potential in it so instead he got a bass that plays and sounds like a €5000 bass and he is very happy with it. The goal is not only to make it look factory but even better than original. And it´s a totally different bass now. For the better. The customer drove 600 km to collect the bass! We had a fun afternoon setting up, good swedish fika and lunch. He couldn´t believe it was the same bass afterwards. This bass could have been used for spares but luckily it went my way instead!