Hey Gang, sorry for radio silence... some stuff went ka-blooey at work. Had to be there a while. Here's some words I'll pass along that have come to mean a lot to me in the past few days. "...if you're not part of the solution, there's a lot of good money to be made in prolonging a problem." I didn't make it up or anything, so feel free to hurl it at a consulting firm of your choice.
The fingerboard. Yeah, this rosewood (it's Brazilian rosewood, or BRW over on the UMGF) is worn pretty severely, but I've actually seen them worse. It's the strings... they had a very abrasive, almost like roundwound wire outer winding that during 70 years just chewed its way in. They all will wear a fingerboard, even an ebony one, but these will wear it out faster than say, flat chromesteels. If you look at the close-up, you can even see the indentation of the windings.
This neck is also bowed pretty good. The relief is borderline at the point where I would remove this fingerboard, straighten the neck, rout a channel and inlay a carbon fiber (graphite) reinforcing rod, then reglue the board back on.
I've got options to weigh and pitch here...
1.) I could plane the bow out, removing the grooves at the same time. Faster, cheaper, totally acceptable fix, bass is 100% playable/saleable.
2.) Remove the board, straighten and reinforce the neck, reglue the fingerboard, with an added 1/8" rosewood shim to the bottom, then plane the grooves out. More labor intensive. Better fix. I'd probably do this if it was my bass. I doubt the added expense is worth it for retail.
3.) Rout channels and inlay some rosewood strips in the fingerboard, then plane the entire length, instead of a 'wedge' plane that only removes the grooves. (as in option 1) This is my least favorite, but just as do-able. Probably splits the diff between 1 & 3.
Like I said, it's a borderline case... I can work around an 1/8" of relief... this neck isn't a proverbial snow-ski. And with the synth-gut strings going on here, neither playability nor structure will be at risk. I'm mulling it over.
Meanwhile, the Gollihur Boys got my strings and replacement scrolls here in two days. And my old mentor and good buddy Ward Elliott is coming by the shop tomorrow night to check out that 1930 Martin. Y'all gotta' meet him.